Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to a robot and a robot system.
Background Art
[0002] There have been proposed various robots that can communicate with humans. For example,
Patent Document 1 listed below proposes a humanoid robot that talks in a recorded
voice of a particular individual and that can simultaneously move its members based
on previously registered habits of that individual to express affection and the like.
On the other hand, as a watching system for people who are living alone, Patent Document
2 listed below proposes receiving data of detection both from a human detection sensor
installed in a home of a person as a target to be watched and from an acceleration
sensor that the resident wears, to make judgments on activities and conditions of
the resident and events occurring in the home. Furthermore, Patent Document 3 listed
below proposes a mastication movement detection device in which the number of mastication
movements is counted based on a detected waveform received from a detector that is
placed in an external auditory canal and detects an amount of deformation of the external
auditory canal. Also, as for cartilage conduction, which has been discovered as a
third conduction route in addition to the long-known air conduction and bone conduction,
Patent Document 4 listed below describes that vibration generated by a vibration source
contacting an ear cartilage around the entrance part of an external auditory canal
causes air-conducted sound to be generated from a cartilage surface inside the external
auditory canal, and the generated air-conducted sound then proceeds through the inside
of the external auditory canal to reach an tympanic membrane. Patent Document 5 discloses
a bracelet-type device comprising a cartilage conduction vibration source which can
be placed by the user on its ear.
Citation List
Patent Literature
[0003]
Patent Document 1: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2010-94799
Patent Document 2: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2014-89494
Patent Document 3: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2011-10791
Patent Document 4: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2013-81047
Patent Document 5 : WO 2015/060230 A1
Summary of Invention
Technical Problem
[0004] However, as to robots, and robot systems that utilize robots, there are many problems
yet to be addressed.
[0005] Against the background discussed above, an object of the present invention is to
provide a robot, and a robot system that utilizes a robot, that is capable of appropriate
communication with humans.
Solution to Problem
[0006] To achieve the above object, according to one aspect of the present invention, there
is provided a robot including: a hand; and a cartilage conduction vibration source
which is provided in the hand and which conducts vibration to the ear cartilage of
a human. Thus, communication is possible between the robot and the human by cartilage
conduction with a natural movement.
[0007] According to a specific feature, the robot includes two hands, and the cartilage
conduction vibration source is provided in each of the two hands. Thus, communication
is possible between the robot and the human by cartilage conduction with a comforting
staging in which, for example, the head of the person is held gently in both hands
of the robot. In addition, stereophonic hearing is possible. According to another
specific feature, the robot includes a finger in the hand, and the cartilage conduction
vibration source is provided in the finger. Thus, more efficient cartilage conduction
is possible. According to a more specific feature, there is provided a joint mechanism
which guides the entire hand to achieve contact with the ear cartilage and which adjusts
the finger to guide it to the tragus. Thus, adjustment for appropriate cartilage conduction
is possible.
[0008] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a control unit which, when
the two hands make contact with the ear cartilages of two ears respectively for cartilage
conduction, controls the two hands so as not to restrain the movement of the face
while maintaining the positions of the two hands relative to each other. Thus, cartilage
conduction without a sense of restraint is possible.
[0009] According to another specific feature, the robot includes an eye which is movable
in exterior appearance, and the eye is moved in coordination such that the line of
sight of the eye points between the two hands. Thus, more intimate communication with
the robot by cartilage conduction is possible. According to another specific feature,
the robot includes a mouth mechanism which is movable in exterior appearance, and
the mouth mechanism moves in coordination with the voice conducted by the vibration
of the cartilage conduction vibration source. Thus, communication by natural cartilage
conduction is possible.
[0010] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a limiter which, when the
hand makes contact with the ear cartilage to conduct the vibration of the cartilage
conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage, adjusts the pressure of the contact.
Thus, safe communication by cartilage conduction is possible. According to another
specific feature, the robot includes a communicating means for asking for consent
when the hand is brought into contact with the ear cartilage to conduct the vibration
of the cartilage conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage. Thus, communication
by cartilage conduction without a sense of discomfort is possible.
[0011] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a control unit which, when
the hand is brought into contact with the ear cartilage to conduct the vibration of
the cartilage conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage, confirms safety beforehand.
Thus, highly safe communication by cartilage conduction is possible. According to
another specific feature, the robot includes an abnormality detecting means, and,
when the hand is brought into contact with the ear cartilage to conduct the vibration
of the cartilage conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage, if the abnormality
detecting means detects an abnormality, the hand is inhibited from making contact
with the ear cartilage. Thus, even in an unforeseen situation, trouble can be avoided.
[0012] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a joint mechanism which
holds an arm of the robot so as not to resist the external force which guides the
hand to the ear cartilage. Thus, a person who attempts to make contact with the robot
can easily guide to his ear cartilage the hand of the robot. According to another
specific feature, the cartilage conduction vibration source conducts vibration to
one ear of the human, and, and the robot includes a following means for making the
hand follow the movement of the head of the human. Thus, even when vibration is conducted
to one ear, contact can be prevented from being broken by the movement of the head
of the human.
[0013] According to another specific feature, the hand of the robot has: a first finger
in which the cartilage conduction vibration source is provided; and a second finger
which supports the weight of the head of the human. Thus, while the robot is making
a movement of holding and raising the head of a lying person, natural communication
by cartilage conduction is possible.
[0014] According to another specific feature of the present invention, there is provided
a robot including: a hand; and a heater which heats the hand to human body temperature.
Thus, contact of the robot with the human is possible without an uncomfortable sense
of coldness.
[0015] According to another specific feature of the present invention, there is provided
a robot system including: a robot which has, provided in a finger, a cartilage conduction
vibration source for conducting vibration to the ear cartilage of a human and which
is shared among a large number of humans; and accessories which are to be worn by
the large number of humans respectively, each of the accessories covering at least
part of the ear cartilage. The vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source
is conducted to the ear cartilage of one of the large number of humans indirectly
via the corresponding one of the accessories. Thus, despite the sharing of the hand
of the robot touched by no one knows whom, it is possible to build a hearing system
that provides the benefits of cartilage conduction hygienically. Specifically, the
accessories are each, for example, one of an ear warmer, a headband, an ear cuff,
and an ear-worn article of character merchandise.
[0016] According to another specific feature of the present invention, the accessories each
include an information holding unit that holds information for identifying its wearer,
and the robot includes a reading means for reading the information. Thus, it is possible
to build a robot system that can very adroitly cope with the needs of the wearers
of the accessories, and thus it is possible to motivate people to wear the accessories.
[0017] According to another specific feature of the present invention, there is provided
a robot system including: accessories which are worn by a large number of wearers
respectively and which each include an information holding unit that holds information
for identifying its wearer; and a robot including a reading means for reading the
information. Thus, the robot can handle the individual wearers in manners proper to
them respectively.
Advantageous Effects of Invention
[0018] As described above, according to the present invention, it is possible to provide
a robot, and a robot system that utilizes a robot, that is capable of appropriate
communication with humans.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0019]
FIG. 1 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a first embodiment of the
present invention (first embodiment);
FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a detailed configuration of the first embodiment
described in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view of an ear for describing cartilage conduction;
FIG. 4 is a graph illustrating an example of measured data which shows an effect of
the cartilage conduction;
FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a function of an ear-mounted unit in the first
embodiment;
FIG. 6 is a flowchart illustrating a function of a mobile phone in the first embodiment;
FIG. 7 is a flowchart illustrating a function of an in-home monitoring unit in the
first embodiment;
FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a second embodiment of
the present invention (second embodiment);
Fig. 9 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a third embodiment of the
present invention (third embodiment);
Fig. 10 is a block diagram of a robot of the third embodiment in Fig. 9;
Fig. 11 is a flow chart showing functions of a control unit 240 in a robot of the
third embodiment;
Fig. 12 is a flow chart showing details of step S140 in Fig. 11;
Fig. 13 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a fourth embodiment of
the present invention (fourth embodiment);
Fig. 14 is a block diagram of the fourth embodiment;
Fig. 15 is a flow chart showing part of functions of a control unit in the fourth
embodiment;
Fig. 16 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a fifth embodiment of
the present invention (fifth embodiment);
Fig. 17 is a block diagram of the fifth embodiment;
Fig. 18 is a flow chart showing functions of a control unit in the fifth embodiment;
Fig. 19 is a flow chart showing details of step S258 in Fig. 18;
side views showing contact via accessories in the fifth embodiment;
Fig. 21 is a system block diagram of an entire bank in the fifth embodiment;
Fig. 22 is a flow chart showing functions of a bank control unit in Fig. 21; and
Figs. 23A and 23B comprise perspective views related to a sixth embodiment of the
present invention.
Description of Embodiments
First Embodiment
[0020] FIG. 1 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a first embodiment according
to an aspect of the present invention. According to the first embodiment, a watching
system that performs watching inside a home 2 includes an ear-mounted unit 6 (indicated
by a short-dashed line for distinction from a structure of an ear), which contacts
a cartilage around a hole of an ear 4 of a watching-target person by being sandwiched
between an antihelix and a tragus to fit in a cavum conchae, an in-home monitoring
unit 8, and a mobile phone 10 of the watching-target person. The in-home monitoring
unit 8 and the mobile phone 10 exchange information with the ear-mounted unit 6 via
short-range communication. The mobile phone 10 exchanges information with the ear-mounted
unit 6 and the in-house monitor unit 8 via short-range communication.
[0021] The ear-mounted unit 6 functions as a headset for the mobile phone 10 by performing
the short-range communication with the mobile phone 10, and allows a phone call to
be made with the mobile phone 10 kept in a clothes pocket. The ear-mounted unit 6
also independently functions as a hearing aid. These functions as a headset and as
a hearing aid are both achieved by making use of cartilage conduction, which will
be described later. The ear-mounted unit 6 further incudes a mastication sensor to
detect movement of the tragus, etc., or deformation of the external auditory canal,
caused by masticatory movement. Here, the ear-mounted unit 6 is ring-shaped with a
hole 6a, so that the entrance of the external auditory canal is open even when the
ear-mounted unit 6 is fitted in the external auditory canal. This makes it possible
to hear external sound via the hole 6a, and contributes to a comfortable wear of the
ear-mounted unit 6 without a feeling of blockage in the external auditory canal. Further,
by closing the hole 6a with a finger or covering it with a palm as necessary as will
be described later, it is possible to obtain an occlusion effect in the cartilage
conduction to hear a larger sound.
[0022] The in-home monitor unit 8 has a short-range communication unit 12 for short-range
communication with the ear-mounted unit 6 and the mobile phone 10, and a digital communication
unit 14 which performs always-on-connection Internet communication with an external
device. A control unit 16 controls the entire in-home monitoring unit 8, which includes
the short-range communication unit 12 and the digital communication unit 14. A storage
unit 18 stores therein a program necessary for the control performed by the control
unit 16, and also temporarily stores therein various pieces of data related to the
control, etc.
[0023] With this configuration, the in-home monitoring unit 8 receives a result of detection
of masticatory movement from the ear-mounted unit 6 via the short-range communication.
If no masticatory movement expected in daily life has been detected, the in-home monitor
unit 8 judges that there is a possibility of an abnormality, and notifies a watching-service
provider to that effect via the digital communication unit 14. Further, the in-home
monitoring unit 8 receives information regarding presence/absence of voice of the
watching-target person detected by the headset function of the ear-mounted unit 6.
In a case where there is no voice detected within a predetermined period of time,
or in a case where a voice signal conveying urgency, such as a scream, has been detected,
the in-home monitoring unit 8 judges that there is a possibility of an abnormality,
and notifies a watching-service provider to that effect via the digital communication
unit 14.
[0024] Further, the mobile phone 10 receives a result of detection of masticatory movement
from the ear-mounted unit 6 via short-range communication. If no masticatory movement
expected in daily life has been detected, the mobile phone 10 judges that there is
a possibility of an abnormality, and makes an automatic phone call to a mobile phone
of a member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely
and has been registered in advance, and when an answer to the phone call is received,
the mobile phone 10 notifies him/her to that effect in a form of an automatic voice
message. Further, the mobile phone 10 receives information regarding presence/absence
of voice of the watching-target person detected by the headset function of the ear-mounted
unit 6. In a case where there is no voice detected within a predetermined period of
time, or in a case where a signal of voice conveying urgency, such as a scream, has
been detected, the mobile phone 10 judges that there is a possibility of an abnormality,
and makes an automatic phone call to the mobile phone of the member of family of the
watching-target person or the like who lives remotely and has been registered in advance,
and when an answer to the phone call is received, the mobile phone 10 issues a notification
to that effect.
[0025] Here, in a case where masticatory movement expected in daily life is detected, too,
the mobile phone 10 makes an automatic phone call to the mobile phone of the member
of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely, and when an
answer to the phone call is received, the mobile phone 10 notifies him/her to the
effect that there is no abnormality occurring as an automatic voice message. Further,
based on detection of a normal voice of the watching-target person, too, the mobile
phone 10 makes an automatic phone call to the member of family of the watching-target
person or the like who lives remotely as necessary, and when an answer to the phone
call is received, the mobile phone 10 notifies him/her to the effect that there is
no abnormality occurring in the form of an automatic voice message. This makes it
possible for the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives
remotely to know that the watching-target person regularly has three meals a day,
and presence of conversation that the watching-target person is expected to usually
have or a state of voice to be regularly uttered in a previously set time zone (for
example, conversation in daily shopping, daily sutra chanting), and to rest reassured
knowing that the watching-target person is all right. In this case, however, the mobile
phone 10 makes an automatic phone call even when the watching-target person does not
intend to, and thus contents of such conversations are to be undesirably heard by
the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely.
Even though it is his or her own family member that hears the contents of such conversations,
this is not desirable to the watching-target person in terms of privacy, and thus,
as will be described later, what is notified is just whether or not voice has been
uttered so that the contents of a conversation cannot be heard.
[0026] FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating a detailed configuration of the first embodiment
of the present invention illustrated in FIG. 1. Such elements in FIG. 2 having counterparts
in FIG. 1 are given the same reference numbers as their counterparts, and descriptions
thereof will be omitted unless necessary. The in-home monitoring unit 8, which is
configured as illustrated in FIG. 1, includes a power supply unit 20 which supplies
power to the entire in-home monitoring unit 8. The power supply unit 20 receives power
from a household power supply in the home 2.
[0027] On the other hand, as illustrated in FIG. 2, the mobile phone 10 includes a mobile
phone function unit 22 to perform phone communication by means of an antenna 24 via
a wireless telephone network. A short-range communication unit 26 communicates with
the short-range communication units 36 and 12 of the ear-mounted unit 6 and the in-home
monitoring unit 8, respectively. A GPS unit 28 detects a location of the watching-target
person wearing the ear-mounted unit 6 when he/she is out, and communicates with the
mobile phone of the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who
lives remotely or with the watching-service provider, who have been described above,
to thereby provide them with information of the location of the watching-target person.
A control unit 30 performs entire control of the entire mobile phone 10, which includes
the mobile phone function unit 22, the short-range communication unit 26, and the
GPS unit 28. A storage unit 32 stores therein a program necessary for the control
performed by the control unit 30, and also, temporarily stores therein various pieces
of data related to the control, etc. A power supply unit 34 includes a rechargeable
storage battery, and supplies power to the entire mobile phone 10. In FIG. 2, for
simplicity, such ones of the components of the mobile phone 10 as are typically included
in mobile phones, such as a large-sized touch-panel liquid crystal display unit, a
microphone, a speaker, a proximity sensor, and an inner camera, are not illustrated.
[0028] As illustrated in FIG. 2, the ear-mounted unit 6 includes the short-range communication
unit 36, which performs short-range communication with the short-range communication
unit 26 of the mobile phone 10 and the short-range communication unit 12 of the in-home
monitoring unit 8. A mastication sensor 38 detects movement of the tragus, etc., or
deformation of the external auditory canal of the watching-target person, caused by
masticatory movement of the watching-target person, and thereby detects presence/absence
of mastication of the watching-target person. The mastication sensor 38 includes,
for example, a strain gage, a piezoelectric element, or the like. When a masticatory
movement is detected, a control unit 40 notifies the mobile phone 10 to that effect
through the short-range communication unit 36 and the short-range communication unit
26. If no masticatory movement expected in daily life is detected, the control unit
40 judges that there is a possibility of an abnormality, and, by means of the short-range
communication unit 36, notifies the mobile phone 10 and the in-home monitoring unit
8 to that effect through the short-range communication unit 26 and the short-range
communication unit 36, respectively.
[0029] The ear-mounted unit 6 includes a cartilage conduction vibration source 42 (which
is, for example, a piezoelectric bimorph element), which vibrates in accordance with
a voice signal of a call partner received from the mobile phone 10 via short-range
communication, and this vibration is transmitted to an ear cartilage in contact with
the ear-mounted unit 6, and this makes it possible to hear the voice of the phone
call partner by cartilage conduction, which will be described later. A bone conduction
microphone 44 catches bone-conducted own voice of the watching-target person and transmits
a voice signal of the own voice to the mobile phone 10 via short-range communication,
and this enables conversations to be conducted. In this manner, the ear-mounted unit
6 functions as a headset for the mobile phone 10. An air conduction sound microphone
46 catches an air-conducted voice of an outside conversation partner located close
to the watching-target person to obtain a voice signal of the conversation partner,
which makes the cartilage conduction vibration source 42 vibrate. In this manner,
the ear-mounted unit 6 also independently functions as a hearing aid. The control
unit 40 controls the ear-mounted unit 6 also with respect to the head-set and hearing-aid
functions. In the headset function, as described above, the bone conduction microphone
44 also functions as a voice sensor for watching whether or not the watching-target
person utters voice expected in daily life. A power supply unit 48, which includes
a rechargeable storage battery, supplies power to the entire ear-mounted unit 6.
[0030] Now, cartilage conduction will be explained. Cartilage conduction is a phenomenon
discovered by the present inventors, and denotes the phenomenon in which vibration
conducted to the cartilage around an entrance part of the external auditory canal,
such as that in the tragus, makes the surface of an external-auditory-canal cartilaginous
part vibrate, producing air-conducted sound inside the external auditory canal. The
air-conducted sound produced inside the external auditory canal travels on deeper
into the external auditory canal and reaches the tympanic membrane. Thus, the greater
part of the sound heard by cartilage conduction is the sound heard via the tympanic
membrane. Here, however, the sound heard via the tympanic membrane is not ordinary
air-conducted sound, i.e., sound that has entered the external auditory canal from
outside, but air-conducted sound that is produced inside the external auditory canal.
[0031] FIG. 3 is a sectional view of an ear for illustrating the phenomenon of cartilage
conduction mentioned just above, and illustrates a relationship between the structure
of an ear 4 and the ear-mounted unit 6 used in the present invention. Arrows 52 indicate
transmission routes of vibration of the ear-mounted unit 6 which is made to vibrate
by the cartilage conduction vibration source 42. Vibration generated from the ear-mounted
unit 6 is, as indicated by the arrows 52, first conducted from a contact part to a
cartilage 54 around the entrance part of the external auditory canal. The vibration
of the cartilage 54 generates, from its surface (the external-auditory-canal cartilaginous
part), air-conducted sound inside the external auditory canal. Then the air-conducted
sound travels on deeper into the external auditory canal and reaches a tympanic membrane
50 via an external auditory canal osseous part 56. Here, as indicated by an arrow
58 (which indicates a route of ordinary audible sound), air-conducted sound from outside
enters the external auditory canal via the hole 6a of the ear-mounted unit 6, and
reaches the tympanic membrane 50. This contributes to comfortable wear of the ear-mounted
unit 6 without a feeling of blockage in the external auditory canal.
[0032] FIG. 4 is a graph illustrating an example of measured data showing an effect of cartilage
conduction. The graph of FIG. 4 illustrates, in relation to frequency, sound pressure
within the external auditory canal at a position 1 cm inside from the entrance part
of the external auditory canal when, without contact with a helix, a surface of an
outer wall of a vibration body that is caused to vibrate by a cartilage conduction
vibration source is brought into contact with at least part of ear cartilage around
the entrance part of the external auditory canal. In the graph, a vertical axis indicates
sound pressure (in dBSPL), and a horizontal axis indicates frequency on a logarithmic
scale (in Hz). In terms of contact pressure relationship between the surface of the
outer wall of the vibration body and the cartilage around the entrance part of the
external auditory canal, the graph uses a solid line to illustrate the sound pressure
during a non-contact state (in a state where only air-conducted sound generated from
the surface of the outer wall of the vibration body can be heard), a short dashed
line to illustrate the sound pressure under a contact pressure of 10 grams, a single-dotted
chain line to illustrate the sound pressure under a contact pressure of 250 grams,
and a double-dotted chain line to illustrate the sound pressure under a contact pressure
of 500 grams. As illustrated in the figure, the sound pressure increases as the contact
pressure is increased from the non-contact state to the 10-gram contact pressure,
and further increases as the contact pressure is increased to 250 grams, and then,
the sound pressure increases even more as the contact pressure is further increased
to 500 grams.
[0033] As can be readily understood from the graph of FIG. 4, when the surface of the outer
wall of the vibration body is brought into contact with at least part of the ear cartilage
around the entrance part of the external auditory canal without contacting the helix,
the sound pressure at the position 1 cm inside from the entrance part of the external
auditory canal increases by at least 10 dB in a main frequency range of voice (500
Hz to 2,300 Hz), compared to in the non-contact state. (See and compare the non-contact
state indicated by the solid line with the state indicated by the single-dotted chain
line.)
[0034] As can also be readily understood from the graph of FIG. 4, when the surface of the
outer wall of the vibration body is brought into contact with at least part of the
ear cartilage around the entrance part of the external auditory canal without contacting
the helix, the sound pressure at the position 1 cm inside from the entrance part of
the external auditory canal changes by at least 5 dB in the main frequency range of
voice (500 Hz to 2,500 Hz) as the contact pressure changes. (See and compare the slightly
contacting state indicated by the short-dashed line with the state indicated by the
single-dotted chain line).
[0035] As is clear from the above description, even when the ear-mounted unit 6 does not
have a structure for generating air-conducted sound (such as a vibration plate included
in typical earphones), it is possible to obtain sufficient sound pressure by transmitting
vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source 42 to the ear cartilage by
bringing the cartilage conduction vibration source 42 into contact with the ear cartilage.
As is also clear from the above description, since there is no need of providing a
structure for generating air-conducted sound, the ear-mounted unit 6 can be formed
in a ring shape having the hole 6a, for example, and this makes it possible to hear
outside sound through the hole 6a even when the ear-mounted unit 6 is mounted to an
ear, and this contributes to comfortable wear of the ear-mounted unit 6 without a
feeling of blockage in the external auditory canal.
[0036] Further, as can be readily understood from the graph of FIG. 4, when the entrance
part of the external auditory canal is closed by bringing the surface of the outer
wall of the vibration body into firm contact with at least part of the ear cartilage
(the data of FIG. 4 was actually obtained by measurement performed in a state where
the entrance of the external auditory canal was closed with the tragus bent with the
surface of the outer wall of the vibration body pressed against the tragus from outside),
the sound pressure at the position 1 cm inside from the entrance portion of the external
auditory canal increases by at least 20 dB in the main frequency range of voice (300
Hz to 1800 Hz). This is caused by the occlusion effect. (See and compare the non-contact
state indicated by the solid line with the state where the external auditory canal
is closed indicated by the double-dotted chain line).
[0037] The measurement results of which are illustrated in FIG. 4 was all conducted under
a constant output of the cartilage conduction vibration source. Regarding FIG. 4,
for the measurement conducted with the surface of the outer wall of the vibration
body contacting at least part of the ear cartilage around the entrance part of the
external auditory canal without contacting the helix, the surface of the outer wall
of the vibration body was brought into contact with at least part of the ear cartilage
from outside of the tragus. Also, for the measurement conducted with the external
auditory canal closed, the closed state of the external auditory canal was brought
about by pressing the tragus from outside so strong as to bend the tragus as described
above.
[0038] In the first embodiment, the occlusion effect as described above can be achieved
by closing the hole 6a and increasing the contact pressure of the ear-mounted unit
6 against the cartilage by pushing the ear-mounted unit 6 with a finger placed over
the hole 6a. Or, instead, the occlusion effect can be achieved by covering the entire
ear 4 with a palm. Thus, clearly, in the first embodiment, too, it is possible to
hear a larger sound by closing the hole 6a with a finger or entirely covering the
ear with a palm.
[0039] The measurement graph of FIG. 4 is merely an example; upon further scrutiny, there
are individual differences. Also, for simplification and standardization of the phenomenon,
the values illustrated in the measurement graph of FIG. 4 were obtained through measurement
performed in a state where the surface of the outer wall of the vibration body was
in contact only with a small surface area of the outside of the tragus. However, increase
in sound pressure caused by the contact with the cartilage also depends on the area
of the contact, and in a case where the surface of the outer wall is in contact with
the ear cartilage around the entrance part of the external auditory canal without
contacting the helix, the increase in sound pressure is further elevated when the
surface of the outer wall of the vibration body is in contact with a portion of the
cartilage wider than around the entrance part of the external auditory canal. In consideration
of the above facts, the values illustrated in the measurement graph of FIG. 4 have
generality in illustrating the configuration making use of cartilage conduction, and
can be reproduced by many and unspecified subjects. Further, the measurement graph
of FIG. 4 was drawn by plotting the values obtained by the measurement conducted with
the tragus being pressed from the outside in closing the entrance part of the external
auditory canal to thereby increase the contact pressure and fold the tragus over,
but similar results can be obtained also in a case where the outer wall of the vibration
body is pressed into the entrance part of the external auditory canal to close the
external auditory canal.
[0040] FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a function of the control unit 40 of the ear-mounted
unit 6 in the watching system of the first embodiment. The flow starts when the ear-mounted
unit 6 connected to an unillustrated charger for charging is disconnected from the
charger. When the flow starts, in Step S2, it is checked whether or not pairing for
short-range communication with the mobile phone 10 has been set, and when no pairing
is found to have been set, pairing is automatically set. Next, in Step S4, the air
conduction microphone 46 and the bone conduction microphone 44 are turned on. Thereby,
the ear-mounted unit 6 starts to function as a hearing aid, and also the bone conduction
microphone 44 is brought into a standby state in which it stands by for detection
of voice of the watching-target person. Here, although omitted in the flow, the mastication
sensor 38 is constantly in an ON state from the start to an end of the flow and in
a standby state in which it stands by for detection of mastication.
[0041] Next, in Step S6, it is checked whether or not the mastication sensor 38 has detected
a masticatory movement. When a mastication movement is found to have been detected,
the process proceeds to Step S8, where a detection signal is transmitted to the mobile
phone 10 via short-range communication, and then the process proceeds to Step S12.
On the other hand, when no mastication movement is found to have been detected in
Step S6, the process proceeds directly to Step S12.
[0042] In Step S12, it is checked whether or not the bone conduction microphone 44 has detected
voice of the watching-target person. When voice of the watching-target person is found
to have been detected, the process proceeds to Step S14, and a detected voice signal
is transmitted to the mobile phone 10 via the short-range communication, and meanwhile,
in Step S16, the detected voice signal is transmitted to the in-home monitoring unit
8 via the short-range communication. Although the steps from Step S12 to Step S16
are illustrated in a simplified manner, in these steps, actually, for a predetermined
period of time (10 seconds, for example) after voice starts to be detected by the
bone conduction microphone 44, the voice signal continues to be transmitted from the
bone conduction microphone 44 simultaneously to the mobile phone 10 and the in-home
monitoring unit 8. At this time, even when the voice continues to be detected for
a predetermined period of time or longer, the transmission is stopped as soon as the
predetermined period of time elapses, whereas even though the voice disappears before
the predetermined period of time elapses, the transmission of output of the bone conduction
microphone 44 continues to be performed until the predetermined period of time elapses.
The above-described transmission of the voice signal continued for a predetermined
period of time through the steps from Step S12 to Step S16 is finished, the process
proceeds to Step S20. On the other hand, when no voice signal is detected in Step
S12, the process proceeds directly to Step S20.
[0043] In Step S20, it is checked whether the watching-target person has operated the mobile
phone 10 to make a phone call and the other party has answered the phone call, or
whether there has been an external incoming call received by the mobile phone 10 and
the watching-target person has operated the mobile phone 10 to answer the incoming
call. If whichever of the above is found to have occurred, the process proceeds to
Step S22, where the air conduction microphone 46 is turned off and the bone conduction
microphone 44 is maintained in an on state, and then the process proceeds to Step
S24. Thereby, the ear-mounted unit 6 starts to function as a headset for the mobile
phone 10, and prevents ambient noise from being picked up by the air conduction microphone
46 to disturb the phone call.
[0044] In Step S24, it is checked whether the phone call started in Step S20 has been ended
by hanging-up of the phone. Then, when it is detected that the phone call has been
ended, the process proceeds to Step S26, where the air conduction microphone 46 is
turned on and the bone conduction microphone 44 is maintained in an on state, and
the process proceeds to Step S28. Thereby, the ear-mounted unit 6 starts to function
as a hearing aid again, and the bone conduction microphone 44 is maintained in the
standby state in which it stands by for detection of voice of the watching-target
person. On the other hand, when it is found that the phone call has not been ended
yet in Step S24, the Step S24 is repeated until end of the phone call is detected.
Further, in a case where, in Step S20, neither making a phone call and answering the
phone call nor receiving a phone call and answering the phone call is detected, the
process proceeds directly to Step S28.
[0045] In Step S28, it is checked whether the storage battery of the power supply unit 48
has been exhausted. When the storage battery is found not to have been exhausted,
the process proceeds to Step S30, where it is checked whether the ear-mounted unit
6 has been connected to the charger, which is not illustrated, to be charged. This
step is provided to deal with a case of removing the ear-mounted unit 6 from the year
4 to be charged even though the storage battery has not been exhausted. When connection
for charging is detected in Step S30, the process proceeds to Step S32, where ending
processing is performed to end the flow. This is significant in that this helps prevent
the ear-mounted unit 6 from being maintained in an operation state by mistake when
it is removed from the ear 4 and thus its watching function is disabled. On the other
hand, when no connection for charging is detected in Step S30, the process returns
to Step S6 to repeat the steps from Step S6 to Step S30 until the storage battery
becomes exhausted or connection is achieved for charging, and the ear-mounted unit
6 maintains, as necessary, its hearing-aid function, watching function, and headset
function for the mobile phone 10. Here, in a case where it is detected in Step S28
that the storage battery has been exhausted, too, the process proceeds to Step S32,
where the ending processing is performed to end the flow.
[0046] FIG. 6 is a flowchart illustrating a function of the control unit 30 of the mobile
phone 10 in the first embodiment. Note that FIG. 6 illustrates the flow by extracting
operations of functions related to watching, and thus in the mobile phone 10, the
control unit 30 has operations that are not described in the flow of FIG. 6, such
as operations related to a normal mobile phone function of the mobile phone 10. A
hardware configuration itself of the mobile phone 10 is one that is typically adopted
in mobile phones, and the functions extracted in FIG. 6 are installed in the ear-mounted
unit 6 as accessory software.
[0047] The flow of FIG. 6 starts when a power switch of the mobile phone 10 is turned on,
and in Step S42, a normal mobile phone mode is set. Next, in Step S44, a check is
performed for a state of pairing for the short-range communication with the ear-mounted
unit 6. When the pairing is found to have been achieved, watching can be performed
by the mobile phone 10 in cooperation with the ear-mounted unit 6, and thus the process
proceeds to Step S46.
[0048] In Step S46, it is checked whether or not a new mastication detection signal has
been received from the ear-mounted unit 6, and when it is found that there has been
reception of a new mastication detection signal, the process proceeds to Step S48,
where an e-mail notifying that the watching-target person is safe is automatically
transmitted to a mobile phone of the member of family of the watching-target person
or the like who lives remotely and has been registered in advance. Further, it may
be set in advance that in Step S48, instead of sending an e-mail, an automatic phone
call is made to the mobile phone of the member of family of the watching-target person
or the like who lives remotely and has been registered in advance, and on reception
of a response from the mobile phone, an automatic voice message is transmitted to
notify him/her that the watching-target person is safe. It is also possible to set
such that both an e-mail and a phone call are to be sent and made. As for detecting
mastication, which basically takes place three times a day and thus can be regarded
as not too often, each time a mastication detection signal is detected, the member
of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely is notified
that the watching-target person is safe and thereby reassured. Here, in a case where
the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely
feels annoyed by such safety notifications, it is possible to set in advance such
that Step S48 will be omitted.
[0049] Next, the process proceeds to Step S50, where reception history of mastication detection
signals stored in the storage unit 32 is updated, together with time and date information,
based on the reception of the new mastication detection signal, and a GPS signal at
that time point is also stored in the storage unit 32, and then the process proceeds
to Step S52. On the other hand, when reception of a mastication detection signal has
not been able to be confirmed in Step S46, the process proceeds directly to Step S52.
[0050] In Step S52, based on the reception history stored in the storage unit 32, it is
checked whether or not there has been reception of a new mastication detection signal
within a predetermined period of time after the reception of the preceding mastication
detection signal. When it is found that there has not been reception of a new mastication
detection signal within the predetermined period of time, the process proceeds to
Step S54, where an automatic phone call is made to the mobile phone of the member
of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely and has been
registered in advance, and on reception of a response to the phone call, an automatic
voice message is transmitted to the effect that there is a possibility of an abnormality,
and the process proceeds to Step S56. Further, in Step S54, another automatic voice
message is transmitted to notify a current location of the watching-target person
based on GPS information obtained then. On the other hand, in Step S52, when it is
confirmed from the reception history that there has been reception of a new mastication
detection signal, the process proceeds to Step S56.
[0051] In Step S56, it is checked whether or not there has been reception of a voice signal
picked up by the bone conduction microphone 44 of the ear-mounted unit 6. When it
is found that there has been reception of such a voice signal, the process proceeds
to Step S58, where it is checked whether or not the received voice is a scream or
begging for help (urgency) based on recognized contents of the voice signal (such
as words included in the voice signal), intensity of the voice signal, a tone pattern,
etc. When there is a high possibility that the voice is a scream or begging for help
(when it is judged that it is a highly urgent situation), the process proceeds to
Step S60, where an automatic phone call is made to the mobile phone of the member
of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely and has been
registered in advance, and on reception of a response to the phone call, the received
voice itself is transmitted to the mobile phone, and then the process proceeds to
Step S62. On the other hand, when, in Step S58, it is judged that the received voice
is not a scream or begging for help but merely voice of an ordinary conversation (of
low urgency), the process proceeds directly to Step S62.
[0052] In Step S62, it is checked whether or not the received voice signal has been received
in a time zone (for example, a time zone when the watching-target usually goes shopping,
a time zone when the watching-target person usually chants a sutra) previously set
based on a regular life pattern. When the result of the check is in the affirmative,
the process proceeds to Step S64, where an e-mail is automatically transmitted to
the mobile phone of the member of family of the watching-target person or the like
who lives remotely and has been registered in advance to notify him/her that the watching-target
person is safe, and the process proceeds to Step S66. On the other hand, in Step S62,
when the received voice signal is found not to have been received in the previously
set time zone, the process proceeds directly to Step S66. Here, a setting same as
in Step S48 is also possible, that is, instead of or together with an e-mail, an automatic
phone call may be made and automatic voice message may be transmitted. Further, in
a case where the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives
remotely feels annoyed by such safety notifications, it is possible to set in advance
such that Steps S62 and S64 will be omitted. The message to be transmitted in Step
S64 is not the voice signal actually picked up by the bone conduction microphone 44,
but a message notifying merely the fact that there has been reception of a voice signal.
Thus, in contrast to in Step S60, contents of conversation of the watching-target
person are not heard and thus privacy of the watching-target person is preserved.
[0053] In Step S66, reception history of voice signals stored in the storage unit 32 is
updated, together with time and date information, based on the reception of the new
voice signal, and a GPS signal at that time point is also stored in the storage unit
32, and then the process proceeds to Step S68. On the other hand, in a case where
reception of a voice signal picked up by the bone conduction microphone 44 has not
been confirmed in Step S56, the process proceeds directly to Step S68.
[0054] In Step S68, based on the reception history stored in the storage unit 32, it is
checked whether or not there has been reception of a new voice signal within a predetermined
period of time after the reception of the preceding voice signal. When there has been
no reception of a new voice signal within the predetermined period of time, the process
proceeds to Step S70, where an automatic phone call is made to the mobile phone of
the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely
and has been registered in advance, and on reception of a response to the phone call,
an automatic voice message is transmitted to the effect that there is a possibility
of an abnormality, and then the process proceeds to Step S72. In Step S70, too, another
automatic voice message is transmitted to notify a current location of the watching-target
person based on GPS information obtained then. On the other hand, when it is confirmed
in Step S68 that there has been reception of a new voice signal within the predetermined
period of time, the process proceeds directly to Step S72. Here, in a case where setting
of pairing with the ear-mounted unit 6 is not confirmed in Step S44, the process proceeds
directly to Step S72, the steps for watching are not performed, and the mobile phone
10 functions as an ordinary mobile phone.
[0055] In Step S72, it is checked whether or not the storage battery of the power supply
unit 34 has been exhausted. When the storage battery is found not to have been exhausted,
the process returns to Step S44, and then, the steps from Step S44 to Step S 72 are
repeated until exhaustion of the storage battery is detected, such that the mobile
phone 10 deals with various situations in watching. On the other hand, in a case where,
in Step S72, the storage battery is found to have been exhausted, the process proceeds
to Step S74, where ending processing is performed to end the flow.
[0056] FIG. 7 is a flowchart illustrating a function of the control unit 16 of the in-home
monitoring unit 16 in the first embodiment. The flow starts when the in-home monitoring
unit 8 is placed and connected to the household power supply or the power supply of
the in-home monitoring unit 8 is turned on. Then, in Step S82, always-on connection
to the Internet is automatically set for communication with the watching service provider,
and an automatic test is performed to check cooperation, such as the short-range communication,
with the ear-mounted unit 6, and the process proceeds to Step S84.
[0057] In Step S84, it is checked whether or not the state of the short-range communication
with the ear-mounted unit 6 has been shifted from an enabled state to a disabled state.
This is equivalent to checking whether or not the watching-target person has gone
out into a range where the short-range communication is not available. When such shift
of the state is found not to have taken place, the process proceeds to Step S86, where
it is checked whether or not the state of the short-range communication with the ear-mounted
unit 6 has shifted from the disabled state to the enabled state. This is equivalent
to checking whether or not the watching-target person has come back into the short-range
communication range. When such shift of the state is found to have taken place, the
process proceeds to Step S88, where an e-mail is automatically transmitted to the
mobile phone of the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who
lives remotely and has been registered in advance to notify him /her that the watching-target
person has come home.
[0058] Further, in Step S90, automatic short-range communication is performed with the mobile
phone 10, and processing is performed to confirm that the state of short-range communication
has been shifted back into the state of system configuration as illustrated in FIG.
2. This processing is performed because it can be presumed that when the watching-target
person is out, the mobile phone 10 is carried by him/her into a range where the short-range
communication is not available. In Step S90, if by any chance it cannot be confirmed
that the short-range communication is possible with the mobile phone 10, notification
to that effect is issued to the watching service provider and to the mobile phone
of the member of family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely.
[0059] In Step S90, further, a cross check of the history of reception from the ear-mounted
unit 6 and information exchange are performed between the storage unit 18 of the in-home
monitoring unit 8 and the storage unit 32 of the mobile phone 10 to match the information
in the storage unit 18 and the information in the storage unit 32 with each other.
This is applicable mainly to a case where the watching-target person is out and the
in-home monitoring unit 8 cannot receive signals from ear-mounted unit 6, during which
information cannot be received from the in-home monitoring unit 8 and thus information
is received from the mobile phone 10 instead. This helps prevent inconvenience of,
for example, the in-home monitoring unit 8 erroneously recognizing an abnormal state
without any signal transmission from the ear-mounted unit 6 for a predetermined period
of time or longer, although there has been a transmission of a signal from the ear-mounted
unit 6. The function of matching information in the two storage units by the cross
check as described above is also useful as a measure to deal with a case where the
storage battery of the mobile phone 10 has been exhausted when the mobile phone 10
is in the home 2 and thus information is not received from the ear-mounted unit 6
until the storage battery is recharged.
[0060] When the processing in Step S90 is completed, the process proceeds to Step S92, where
it is checked whether or not there has been reception of a new mastication detection
signal from the ear-mounted unit 6. When it is found that there has been reception
of a new mastication detection signal, the process proceeds to Step S94, where reception
history of mastication detection signals stored in the storage unit 18 is updated,
together with time and date information, based on the reception of the new mastication
detection signal, and the process proceeds to Step S96. On the other hand, when reception
of a new mastication detection signal has been unable to be confirmed in Step S92,
the process proceeds directly to Step S96.
[0061] In Step S96, based on the reception history stored in the storage unit 18, it is
checked whether or not there has been reception of a new mastication detection signal
within a predetermined period of time after the reception of the preceding mastication
detection signal. When there is no reception of a new mastication detection signal
within the predetermined period of time, the process proceeds to Step S98, where an
automatic notification is issued to the watching service provider, with whom a contract
has been made in advance, to the effect that there is a possibility of an abnormality,
and then the process proceeds to Step S100. On the other hand, when it is confirmed,
in Step S96, from the reception history of mastication detection signals, that there
has been reception of a new mastication detection signal within the predetermined
period of time, it is judged that there is no abnormality occurring, and the process
proceeds directly to Step S100.
[0062] In Step S100, it is checked whether or not there has been reception of a voice signal
picked up by the bone conduction microphone 44 of the ear-mounted unit 6. When it
is found that there has been reception of such a voice signal, the process proceeds
to Step S102, where it is checked whether or not the received voice is a scream, a
cry for help, or the like, based on identification of voice in the contents (words
and the like included therein) of the voice signal, intensity pattern, tone, and the
like of the voice signal, etc. When there is a high possibility that the voice is
a scream or a cry for help, the process proceeds to Step S104, where the received
voice itself is transferred to the watching-service provider, and the process proceeds
to Step S106. On the other hand, when, in Step S102, it is judged that the received
voice is neither a scream nor a cry for help, but voice of an ordinary conversation,
the process proceeds directly to Step S106.
[0063] In Step S106, reception history of voice signals stored in the storage unit 18 is
updated, together with time and data information, based on the reception of the new
voice signal, and the process proceeds to Step S108. On the other hand, when reception
of a voice signal picked up by the bone conduction microphone 44 has not been confirmed
in Step S100, the process proceeds directly to Step S108.
[0064] In Step S108, based on the reception history of voice signals stored in the storage
unit 18, it is checked whether or not there has been reception of a new voice signal
within a predetermined period of time after the reception of the preceding voice signal.
When it is found that there has been no reception of a new voice signal within the
predetermined period of time, the process proceeds to Step S110, where an automatic
notification is issued to the watching service provider to the effect that there is
a possibility of an abnormality, and then the process proceeds to Step S112. On the
other hand, when it is confirmed in Step S108 that there has been reception of a new
voice signal within the predetermined period of time based on the reception history,
the process proceeds directly to Step S112. Here, when it is detected in Step S84
that the state of the short-range communication with the ear-mounted unit 6 has been
shifted from an enabled state to a disabled state, the process proceeds to Step S114,
where an e-mail is automatically transmitted to the mobile phone of the member of
family of the watching-target person or the like who lives remotely and has been registered
in advance to notify him/her that the watching-target person has gone out, and then
the step proceeds to Step S112. In this case, since it is impossible to receive signals
from the ear-mounted unit 6 and thus to perform watching, the mobile phone 10 that
the watching-target person carries is charged with execution of the watching function,
and the in-home monitoring unit 8 does not executes the watching function.
[0065] In Step S112, it is checked whether or not power of the in-home monitoring unit 8
has been turned off. Turning off of the power of the in-home monitoring unit 8 includes
power-supply disconnection caused by power failure or the like. When it is found that
there has been no turning off of the power, the process returns to Step S84, and then
the steps of from Step S84 to Step S114 are repeated as long as the power is not turned
off, and the in-home monitoring unit 8 deals with various situations in watching.
On the other hand, when turning off of the power is detected in Step S112, the process
proceeds to Step S116, where ending processing is performed to end the flow.
Second Embodiment
[0066] FIG. 8 is a diagram illustrating a system configuration of a second embodiment according
to an aspect of the present invention. According to the second embodiment, a watching
system for watching inside a home includes an eyeglass type ear-mounted unit 106.
The other features are the same as the first embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 1 and
2, and thus the common features are denoted by the same reference numerals and overlapping
descriptions thereof will not be repeated. In FIG. 8, for the sake of simplicity,
a home 2 and an in-home monitoring unit 8 are not illustrated, but configurations
thereof are common to those of the first embodiment described in FIGS. 1 and 2.
[0067] According to the present invention, a cartilage conduction vibration source, a bone
conduction microphone, and a mastication sensor can each be formed with a piezoelectric
element, and thus, one piezoelectric element can serve as a cartilage conduction vibration
source, a bone conduction microphone, and a mastication sensor. In the second embodiment
illustrated in FIG. 8, a piezoelectric bimorph element 142 which serves as a cartilage
conduction vibration source, a bone conduction microphone, and a mastication sensor
are formed in such part of a temple of eyeglasses as is laid on a cartilage in a base
of an ear 4 when the eyeglasses are worn. With this configuration, vibration of the
piezoelectric bimorph element 142 is conducted to the cartilage at the base of the
ear 4 to cause cartilage conduction. Further, voice by bone conduction is picked up
by the piezoelectric bimorph element 142. Further, movement caused by mastication
in part close to the base of the ear 4 is also detected by the piezoelectric bimorph
element 142. In using the piezoelectric bimorph element 142 for the plurality of functions,
extraction and separation of signals fed to and outputted from the piezoelectric bimorph
element 142 are achieved by means of signal processing performed by a control unit
140. When the piezoelectric bimorph element 142 is used for the plurality of functions,
an air conduction microphone 46, which is originally provided for the purpose of picking
up voice of a conversation partner for the function of hearing aid, is used to pick
up voice of a watching-target person himself or herself by air conduction, and the
picked up voice is used as information for the extraction and separation of signals
fed to and outputted from the piezoelectric bimorph element 142. In the second embodiment,
too, the entrance of an external auditory canal is left open, and thus it is possible
to hear external sound and to achieve comfortable wear of an ear-mounted unit 106
without a feeling of blockage in the external auditory canal. Further, by closing
the entrance of the external auditory canal with a finger or completely covering the
ear 4 with a palm, it is possible to obtain the occlusion effect in cartilage conduction,
to thereby hear a larger sound.
[0068] The various features of the embodiments described above can be implemented not only
in those specific embodiments but also in any other embodiment so long as they provide
their advantages. Moreover, the various features of the embodiments can be implemented
with various modifications. Modified features can be implemented in appropriate combinations
with each other and with unmodified features.
[0069] For example, in the configuration of the first embodiment, one piezoelectric bimorph
element may be used for the functions of the cartilage conduction vibration source,
the bone conduction microphone, and the mastication sensor as in the second embodiment.
Or, conversely, in the second embodiment, the cartilage conduction vibration source,
the bone conduction microphone, and the mastication sensor may be formed as optimum
separate elements to be optimally disposed at scattered positions.
[0070] Further, in the above embodiments, a bone conduction microphone is adopted to pick
up voice of a watching-target person, but an air-conducted sound microphone may be
used for this purpose (for example, the air conduction microphone 46 serving for this
purpose, too).
Third Embodiment
[0071] Fig. 9 is a system configuration diagram of a third embodiment according to one aspect
of the present invention. The third embodiment is configured as a robot that can communicate
with a human by cartilage conduction; as in the first embodiment, it constitutes a
watching system for watching inside a home and is capable of humanly communication
with a watching-target person. The third embodiment in Fig. 9 is similar to the first
embodiment except that the ear-mounted unit 6 in the first embodiment in Fig. 1 is
replaced with a robot 206 in the third embodiment. Accordingly, illustration will
be omitted except for the robot 206 and the watching-target person 201, and no description
of common features will be repeated unless necessary.
[0072] As in the first embodiment, the robot 206 exchanges information with the in-home
monitoring unit 8 shown in Fig. 1 and the mobile phone 10 of the watching-target person
201 via short-range communication. The robot 206 has, at the left and right ears 205
of a head part 203, a pair of stereo external air-conducted sound microphones to collect
the voice of the watching-target person 201, and has, at left and right eyes 207 of
the head part 203, a pair of 3D cameras to take an image of the watching-target person
201. The air-conducted sound microphones and the 3D cameras function respectively
as sensors for watching the watching-target person 201, and the detected results are
transmitted to the in-home monitoring unit 8 and the mobile phone 10 shown in Fig.
1. Moreover, at a mouth mechanism 209 in the head part 203 of the robot 206, an air-conducted
sound speaker is provided, so that speech can be uttered to the watching-target person
201. At that time, the mouth mechanism 209 of the robot 206 moves in coordination
with the speech. Moreover, the air-conducted sound microphones and the 3D cameras
provided in the head part 203 of the robot 206 function also as an external talking
unit of the mobile phone 10.
[0073] Next, cartilage conduction by use of the robot 206 will be described. In a middle
finger 213 of a right hand 211 of the robot 206, a cartilage conduction vibration
source comprising a piezoelectric bimorph or the like is arranged so that the finger
tip of the middle finger 213 vibrates efficiently. The vibration of the cartilage
conduction vibration source is conducted to the entire right hand 211, and thus cartilage
conduction is possible from any part of the right hand 211. Fig. 9 shows a state where
the finger tip of the middle finger 213 makes contact with the tragus 232 of the left
ear of the watching-target person 201 and thereby optimum cartilage conduction is
achieved. Though not illustrated in Fig. 9, a similar cartilage conduction vibration
source is arranged also in a middle finger of a left hand of the robot 206, and makes
contact with the tragus of the right ear of the watching-target person 201. In this
way, cartilage conduction is possible stereophonically as in the ordinary hearing
of air-conducted sound with both ears. Moreover, as in the utterance of speech from
the air-conducted sound, the mouth mechanism 209 of the robot 206 moves in coordination
with the voice conducted by cartilage conduction.
[0074] As shown in Fig. 9, the robot 206 gently holds the face of the watching-target person
201 in both hands and utters speech in a comforting atmosphere. Thus, the watching-target
person 201 can hear the voice of the robot 206 in a comforted psychological condition.
For such a staging, the right and left arms 215 and 217 of the robot 206 are provided
with applied pressure limiters so that the pressure with which the robot 206 holds
the face of the watching-target person 201 in both hands is not excessive.
[0075] Furthermore, to prevent the watching-target person 201 from feeling a sense of restraint,
once an adequate pressure between the left and right hands is determined, while the
relative distance between the left and right hands are maintained, the joints of the
right and left arms 215 and 217 of the robot 206 are controlled relative to a trunk
219 of the robot 206 so that the left and right hands follow, with no resistance,
the free movement of the face of the watching-target person 201. Moreover, to prevent
the robot 206 from feeling cold when it touches the watching-target person 201 for
the first time, the two hands of the robot 206 are heated to human body temperature
before starting the movement of holding the face of the watching-target person 201.
Furthermore, to conform to the staging in which the face of the watching-target person
201 is held in both hands and speech is uttered, the left and right eyes 207 of the
robot 206 are movable in exterior appearance so as not to inadvertently avoid the
line of sight of the watching-target person 201 but follows it naturally without giving
an intimidating impression.
[0076] Utterance of speech by cartilage conduction as described above is useful in cases
such as where the watching-target person 201 has impaired hearing for advanced age
or the like and where the ambient noise is loud, and helps avoid a situation like
one that requires the air-conducted sound speaker to yell out loudly. Moreover, in
the thumb 221 of the right hand 211 of the robot 206, a bone conduction microphone
is provided to collect the voice of the watching-target person 201 in cases such as
where the ambient sound level is high, so as to collect bone-conducted sound from
the cheek bone or the like. As will be described later, a similar bone conduction
microphone is provided also in the left hand of the robot 206, and collects bone-conducted
sound in a complementary manner with the bone conduction microphone on the right hand
211 side. As the bone conduction microphones, as in the second embodiment, cartilage
conduction vibration sources comprising piezoelectric bimorph elements may be used
to double as bone conduction microphones.
[0077] Fig. 10 is a block diagram of the robot 206 of the third embodiment of the present
invention shown in Fig. 9. Such parts as appear also in Fig. 9 are identified by the
same reference numerals, and no overlapping description will be repeated unless necessary.
As mentioned above, communication with the in-home monitoring unit 8 and the mobile
phone 10 shown in Fig. 1 in the third embodiment is similar to that in the first embodiment,
and accordingly, in Fig. 10, only a short-range communication unit 236 is illustrated
and no description will be repeated.
[0078] As shown in Fig. 10, the robot 206 has, at the left and right ears 205 (see Fig.
9) of the head part 203, a pair of stereo external air-conducted sound microphones
246, and collects external sound including the voice of the watching-target person
201 stereophonically. The head part 203 has, at the left and right eyes 207, a 3D
camera (a pair of cameras) 238, and takes an image of the watching-target person 201.
The direction of the head part 203 and the following of the line of sight of the left
and right eyes 207 are controlled through the recognition of the face and the eyes
of the watching-target person 201 based on an analysis of the image of the 3D camera
238. Moreover, at the mouth mechanism 209 in the head part 203 of the robot 206, an
air-conducted sound speaker 223 is provided, and this makes utterance of speech to
the watching-target person 201 possible as described above. The mouth mechanism 209
moves in coordination with the utterance of speech by the robot 206 from the air-conducted
sound speaker 223.
[0079] As shown in Fig. 10, in the middle finger 213a of the right hand 211 of the robot,
a cartilage conduction vibration source 242a comprising a piezoelectric bimorph element
or the like is arranged so that the finger tip of the middle finger 213a vibrates
efficiently. As mentioned above, the vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration
source 242a is conducted to the entire right hand 211, and thus cartilage conduction
is possible with any part of the right hand 211 in contact with the ear cartilage.
As mentioned above, the mouth mechanism 209 of the robot 206 moves in coordination
with the voice delivered by the vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source
242a. The middle finger 213a is further provided with a tactile sensor 231a comprising
a pressure-sensitive sensor or the like, and this will be described later. In a thumb
221a of the right hand 211 of the robot, a bone conduction microphone 244a is provided,
which collects bone-conducted sound from the cheek bone or the like. As mentioned
above, as to the bone conduction microphone 244a, as in the second embodiment, the
cartilage conduction vibration source 242a comprising a piezoelectric bimorph element
may be used to double as a bone conduction microphone. Though omitted from illustration
to avoid complexity, a tactile sensor similar to the tactile sensor 231a in the middle
finger 213a is provided also in the thumb 221a, and this too will be described later.
The right hand 211 is further provided with a heater 225a, which is switched on before
the start of the movement of holding the face of the watching-target person 201 to
heat the entire right hand 211 to human body temperature.
[0080] As shown in Fig. 10, the right arm 215 is provided with a right joint mechanism 227a,
which performs, among others, a movement for holding the face of the watching-target
person 201 from the right side (the left side as seen from the watching-target person
201) and uttering speech. Although, for simplicity's sake, the right joint mechanism
227a is illustrated only at the should joint, it is assumed to represents all the
joints of the right hand 211 and the right arm 215, including the elbow joint, the
wrist joint, and the finger joints. As will be described later, the right joint mechanism
227a is coordinated with a left joint mechanism 227b so that, when the staging in
which the face of the watching-target person 201 is held in both hands gently and
speech is uttered, once an adequate pressure between the left and right hands is determined,
while the relative distance between the left and right hands are maintained, the mechanisms
are so controlled as to follow, with no resistance, the free movement of the face
of the watching-target person 201.
[0081] The configuration of the left arm 217 and the left hand 229 in Fig. 10 is similar
to the configuration of the right arm 215 and the right hand 211; accordingly, the
constituent elements suffixed with "a", like the middle finger 213a, at the right
side are illustrated as corresponding elements suffixed with "b", like the middle
finger 213b, at the left side, and no overlapping description will be repeated. Of
the constituent elements provided at the left and right sides, the cartilage conduction
vibration sources 242a and 242b allow stereophonic hearing on the principle of cartilage
conduction via the ear drums. On the other hand, the bone conduction microphones 244a
and 244b collect the same vibration of the skull because of the nature of bone conduction;
thus, they are provided at the left and right sides not to constitute stereo microphones
but to mutually complement the contact state. Accordingly, as will be described later,
in a case where the optimal cartilage conduction contact position is secured sufficiently
by fine-tuning the contact position of the thumb at one side, the bone conduction
microphone in the thumb at the other side may be omitted.
[0082] During communication with the watching-target person 201 by cartilage conduction,
the right and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b extend the right and left hands
211 and 229 toward the face of the watching-target person 201 as recognized through
the analysis of the image by the 3D camera 238. The right and left joint mechanisms
227a and 227b are each provided with a load detection sensor, and detect whether or
not any load is acting other than a movement in a free state that may result from
collision with an arm, hand, finger, or the like. If any such load is acting, those
sensors identify at what part of a joint and with what intensity it is acting.
[0083] When the load detection sensors of the right and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b
detect a load, and based on the image by the 3D camera 238, the cause is judged to
be the holding of the face of the watching-target person 201 in both hands, then the
applied pressure limiters operate to limit the pressure with which the face of the
watching-target person 201 is held. Then, while the outputs from the tactile sensors
231a and 231b provided at the finger tips of the left and right middle fingers 213a
and 231b and the image by the 3D camera 238 are monitored, the positions of the right
and left hands 211 and 229 and the curves of the left and right middle fingers 213a
and 231b are fine-tuned. In this way, the left and right middle fingers 213a and 231b
are brought into contact with the tragi of the watching-target person 201 (the state
illustrated in Fig. 9 is achieved). Likewise, also for the left and right thumbs 221a
and 221b, while the outputs of the tactile sensors (unillustrated) provided at their
finger tips and the image by the 3D camera 238 are monitored, the curves of the left
and right thumbs 221a and 221b are fine-tuned so as to make contact with the cheek
bones of the watching-target person 201.
[0084] Once an adequate pressure between left and right hands is determined, the right and
left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b perform control such that the left and right hands
move translatorily while keeping the relative distance between them so as to follow,
with no resistance, the free movement of the face of the watching-target person 201.
This following is performed relative to the state where the right and left arms 215
and 217, in a free state, are raised and kept at rest against their weights, and thus
the load of the right and left arms 215 and 217 does not act on the face. In this
state, when the load detection sensors of the right and left joint mechanisms 227a
and 227b detect a load in a upward, downward, leftward, or rightward direction based
on the movement of the face, in response, while the relative distance between the
left and right hands are maintained, the right and left joint mechanisms 227a and
227b are driven subordinately. Thus, the watching-target person 201, despite his face
being held in both hands of the robot 206, can move the face without restraint while
maintaining the cartilage conduction state.
[0085] The functions described above are achieved by a control unit 240 based on programs
stored in a storage unit 218. The control unit 240 includes a dedicated image processing
function unit that is connected to the 3D camera 238. The control unit 240 further
includes a dedicated piezoelectric bimorph driving function unit that is connected
to the cartilage conduction vibration sources 242a and 242b, and a dedicated sound
processing function unit that is connected to the piezoelectric bimorph driving function
unit, the air-conducted sound speaker 223, and the bone conduction microphones 244a
and 244b. The storage unit 218 temporarily stores various kinds of data for the functioning
of the control unit 240. A power supply unit 248 including a rechargeable battery
supplies different constituent elements of the robot 206 with voltages that they respectively
need. The control unit 240, the storage unit 218, the power supply unit 248, and the
short-range communication unit 236 mentioned above can be built in the trunk 219 of
the robot 206.
[0086] Fig. 11 is a flow chart showing the functions of the control unit 240 in the robot
206 of the third embodiment shown in Fig. 10. The flow starts when the supply of electric
power from the power supply unit 248 is started by a main power switch of the robot
206. When the flow starts, in step S122, it is checked whether or not pairing for
short-range communication with the in-home monitoring unit 8 and the mobile phone
10 (see Fig. 1) of the watching-target person 201 is set, and when no paring is set,
paring is set automatically. Next, in step S124, processing for starting an ordinary
watching function is performed. The ordinary watching function is basically based
on the watching function in the first or second embodiment described with reference
to Figs. 1 to 8; in the case of the third embodiment, the stereo external air-conducted
sound microphones 246 and the 3D camera 238 function as watching sensors.
[0087] Next, in step S126, it is checked whether or not there is an abnormality, and if
there is no abnormality, an advance is made to step S128, where it is checked whether
or not now is a timing for regular reporting. If now is not a timing for regular reporting,
an advance is made to step S130. On the other hand, if, in step S128, it is confirmed
that now is a timing for regular reporting, an advance is made to step S132, where
normality reporting processing is performed, and then an advance is made to step S130.
The normality reporting processing here is similar to that in the first or second
embodiment.
[0088] In step S130, it is judged whether or not to start conversation with the watching-target
person 201. For example, when the watching-target person 201 meets the robot 206 after
a while, as when the watching-target person 201 has come home from a day-care facility
or the robot 206 has come back from repair, or when the watching-target person 201
moves toward the robot 206, or when the watching-target person 201 talks to the robot
206, or when the robot 206, having observed the watching-target person 201, chooses
to spontaneously talk to him, or the like can be a case where a determination that
"conversation should be started" is made.
[0089] If, in step S130, a determination to start conversation is made, an advance is made
to step S134, where, first, the stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246
and the air-conducted sound speaker 223 are turned on in preparation for conversation
by ordinary air-conducted sound. Next, in step S136, it is checked whether or not
the watching-target person 201 is a registered person with whom to conduct conversation
by cartilage conduction. Such registration can be performed beforehand in a case where
the watching-target person 201 has impaired hearing due to advanced age or the like
or by preference of the watching-target person 201 himself. If, in step S136, it cannot
be confirmed that the watching-target person 201 is a registered person for cartilage
conduction, an advance is made to step S138, where it is checked whether or not the
ambient air-conducted sound level is equal to or higher than a predetermined level.
In a watching environment, ordinary noise is unlikely to be present; however, in a
case where a large number of people are chatting at different places in a room, the
ambient air-conducted sound level may be equal to or higher than a predetermined level,
making personal conversation between the robot 206 and the watching-target person
201 by air-conducted sound difficult. If, in step S138, it is judged that the ambient
air-conducted sound level is equal to or higher than the predetermined level, an advance
is made to step S140. On the other hand, if, in step S136, it is judged that the watching-target
person 201 is a registered person with whom to conduct conversation by cartilage conduction,
an advance is made directly to step S140.
[0090] In step S140, processing for bringing both hands of the robot 206 into contact with
both ears of the watching-target person 201 for cartilage conduction is performed.
This will be described in detail later. On completion of the both-hand contact processing
in step S140, an advance is made to step S142, where it is confirmed whether or not
the middle fingers 213a and 213b of both hands of the robot 206 are in contact with
the tragi of both ears of the watching-target person 201 and whether or not the thumbs
221a and 221b of both hands are in contact with both cheek bones of the watching-target
person 201. When it is so confirmed, an advance is made to step S144, where the stereo
external air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted sound speaker 223
are turned off, and the bone conduction microphones 244a and 244b and the cartilage
conduction vibration sources 242a and 242b are all turned on; then an advance is made
to step S146. In this way, conversation by air-conducted sound is switched to conversation
by cartilage conduction and the bone conduction microphones.
[0091] On the other hand, if, in step S142, no contact with the tragi and the cheek bones
as mentioned above is confirmed, an advance is made directly to step S146. As mentioned
earlier, cartilage conduction is possible if only any part of the hands and fingers
of the robot 206 is in contact with any part of the cartilage of the ears of the watching-target
person 201. Thus, if such a state is confirmed in the both-hand contact processing
in step S140, while the stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the
air-conducted sound speaker 223 are kept on, the bone conduction microphones 244a
and 244b and the cartilage conduction vibration sources 242a and 242b are all turned
on. By contrast, if no contact between the hands of the robot 206 and the watching-target
person 201 takes place in the both-hand contact processing in step S140, no processing
for extending both hands of the robot 206 toward the watching-target person 201 is
performed, nor are the bone conduction microphones 244a and 244b and the cartilage
conduction vibration sources 242a and 242b turned on; thus, conversation with the
stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted sound speaker
223 is continued. The both-hand contact processing in step S140 will be described
in detail later.
[0092] If, in step S138, it is not judged that the ambient air-conducted sound level is
equal to or higher than the predetermined level, an advance is made directly to step
S146. In this case, no processing for extending both hands of the robot 206 toward
the watching-target person 201 is performed, but conversation with the stereo external
air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted sound speaker 223 is continued.
[0093] In step S146, it is checked whether or not there is an abnormality. This is to cope
with an unexpected situation that may arise during the conversation started with no
abnormality in step S126. At this stage, cartilage conduction by the hands of the
robot 206 may already be underway, and thus the robot 206 comes to have increased
sensor functions for watching. Specifically, while the bone conduction microphones
244a and 244b and the tactile sensors 231a and 231b contribute to abnormality detection,
in case, for example, the watching-target person 201 falls, an abnormal load acts
on the load detection sensors in the right and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b
via the hands holding the face; this, together with the image by the 3D camera 238,
makes exact abnormality detection possible.
[0094] If, in step S146, no abnormality is detected, an advance is made to step S148, where
it is checked whether or not conversation has ended. This check is done comprehensively
based on a check of whether or not both sides have remained silent for a predetermined
period or longer, an analysis of the contents of conversation, a check for presence
of key words suggesting the end of conversation, and the like. If it is not judged
that conversation has ended, a return is made to step S136 and thereafter, until it
is judged that conversation has ended, steps S136 through S148 are repeated. Owing
to this repetition, even while no cartilage conduction is being performed yet, when,
in step S138, the ambient sound level becomes equal to or higher than the predetermined
level, transition to cartilage conduction is possible. Transition from communication
by air-conducted sound to communication by cartilage conduction is one-directional.
That is, during the just-mentioned repetition, even when, in step S138, the ambient
sound level becomes low, no function is available whereby once-started communication
by cartilage conduction is switched back to communication by air-conducted sound.
Accordingly, in the middle of a session of conversation, no frequent switching occurs
between cartilage conduction communication and air-conducted sound communication.
However, in case of an abnormality, leaving the hands of the robot 206 holding the
face of the watching-target person 201 is dangerous, and this is dealt with by step
S146 in the above-mentioned repetition. This will be described in detail later.
[0095] If, in step S148, it is judged that conversation has ended, an advance is made to
step S150, where it is checked whether or not a cartilage conduction state is in effect.
If a cartilage conduction state is in effect, an advance is made to step S152, where
both hands of the robot 206 are retracted to release the face of the watching-target
person 201, and an advance is made to step S154. On the other hand, if, in step S150,
a cartilage conduction state is not detected, it means that conversation is proceeding
by ordinary air-conducted sound, and the watching-target person 201 is not restrained;
thus an advance is made directly to step S154.
[0096] Now, processing in case of an abnormality will be described. If, in step S126, an
abnormal state is detected, an advance is made to step S156, where abnormality handling
processing is performed, and an advance is made to step S150. The abnormality handling
processing here basically is notifying processing similar to that in the first or
second embodiment; however, since the third embodiment is configured as a robot 206,
in accordance with the condition of the watching-target person 201 as grasped by the
robot 206, if possible and if the degree of urgency exceeds the risk, a previously
programmed emergency treatment is performed. Also if, in step S146, an abnormality
is detected during conversation, an advance is made to step S156, where abnormality
handling processing is performed, and an advance is made to step S150. What is important
here is that, as mentioned above, in case some abnormal state occurs while conversation
is proceeding by cartilage conduction, leaving the hands of the robot 206 holding
the face of the watching-target person 201 is dangerous. Here, if, in step S146, an
abnormality is detected, then even if it is not judged that conversation has ended,
the repetition loop from steps S136 through S148 is exited, and an advance is made,
through the abnormality handling processing in step S156, to step S150. Then if, in
step S150, it is confirmed that a cartilage conduction state has been in effect, an
advance is made to step S152, where both hands of the robot 206 are retracted to release
the face of the watching-target person 201.
[0097] In step S154, it is checked whether or not, as a result of the main power switch
of the robot 206 being turned off or as a result of the rechargeable battery in the
power supply unit 248 being depleted, the supply of electric power to the robot 206
has stopped. If it is not confirmed that the supply of electric power has stopped,
a return is made to step S126. If, in step S130, it is not detected that conversation
has started, a return is made directly to step S126. Thereafter, until, in step S154,
it is confirmed that the supply of electric power has stopped, steps S126 to S154
are repeated to cope with various changes in the condition of the robot 206. On the
other hand, if, in step S154, it is confirmed that the supply of electric power has
stopped, an advance is made to step S158, where predetermined ending processing is
performed, and then the flow ends. The ending processing here includes, as a fail-safe
measure, a function whereby, in case both hands of the robot 206 remain in contact
with the face of the watching-target person, they are retracted.
[0098] Fig. 12 is a flow chart showing the details of the both-hand contact processing in
step S140 in Fig. 11. When the flow starts, in step S162, it is checked whether or
not step S140 has already been performed so that the hands are already in contact
with the watching-target person 201. If it is detected that contact has already been
made, the flow ends immediately; this means that nothing is performed in step S140.
This is a result equivalent to that reached when, in the flow in Fig. 11, as a result
of, in step S138, it being detected that the ambient sound level is higher than the
predetermined level, nothing is performed in steps S140 through S144 and thus, virtually,
step S146 is reached directed. In this way, once, as a result of step S140 being performed,
contact by the hands with the watching-target person 201 is achieved in some way,
it is thereafter possible to avoid, in the middle of conversation, step S140 being
repeated to change the state and to persistently repeat the same processing.
[0099] On the other hand, if, in step S162, contact by the hands of the robot 206 is confirmed,
an advance is made to step S164, where rapid heating of the hands to human body temperature
by the heaters 225a and 225b is started, and an advance is made to step S166. In step
S166, consent-to-contact communication processing is performed. In general, physical
contact (in this case, with the robot 206 as a partner) is comfortable to one who
is willing to accept it, but can be very annoying in some cases. Accordingly, the
robot 206, even if step S140 is reached after the checks in steps S130 through S138
have been gone through, does not act unilaterally but, respecting the intention of
the watching-target person 201, ask for consent to contact in step S166 in Fig. 12.
The communication performed in step S166 at that time is not limited to a direct inquiry
by speech only such as "may I touch your face?" but may instead be, for example, a
gesture involving, as if about to give a hug, first spreading the arms and then shifting,
in such a way as not to surprise the target, into a movement of gently holding the
face. Such a movement may be accompanied with suggestive words such as "shall we chat
in peace?" to attempt comprehensive communication. While such an approach is being
made, the target's behavior is observed with the 3D camera 238 and the stereo external
air-conducted sound microphones 246, and an advance is made to step S168.
[0100] In step S168, it is checked whether or not there is an indication of intention of
the watching-target person 201 with a refusing phrase, or with a refusing movement
such as turning his head away, from the watching-target person 201, and if it is judged
that there is no indication of intention to refuse contact, an advance is made to
step S170. In step S170, it is checked whether or not the watching-target person 201
uses a wheelchair. This is because, with a wheelchair user, the position of the face
is comparatively stable, and applying a contact pressure with the hands of the robot
206 is unlikely to lead to a danger such as a fall. If, in step S170, it is not confirmed
that the watching-target person 201 is a wheelchair user, an advance is made to seat-taking
guidance processing in step S172. This processing involves checking whether or not
there is a chair and where it is located, making an announcement to recommend the
watching-target person 201 to take a seat and guiding him to a chair, confirming whether
or not he has taken the seat, etc. Next, in step S174, a final check is done to see
whether or not bringing the hands into contact with the face of the watching-target
person 201 is dangerous. This check should best be done by confirming whether or not
the watching-target person 201 has taken a seat, but, even when he is standing, may
instead be done by confirming, through the seat-taking guidance processing, that the
watching-target person 201 shows no weakness in the legs and thus applying a certain
pressure to his face is unlikely to lead to a risk of a fall.
[0101] When, in step S174, safety is confirmed, an advance is made to step S176, where line-of-sight
alignment is started whereby the direction in which both hands are extended toward
the face is aligned with the direction of the line of sight, and an advance is made
to step S178. In step S78, both-hand adjustment processing is performed whereby, to
hold the face in both hands, based on information from the 3D camera 238, the right
and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b are driven, and an advance is made to step
S180. In step S180, it is checked whether or not the load resulting from both hands
making contact with the face is detected by the load detection sensors in the right
and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b. If no load is detected, a return is made
to step S178, so that, until both hands make contact with the face, steps S178 and
S180 are repeated. When, in step S180, a load is detected, an advance is made to step
S182, where the applied pressure limiters are turned on to start to limit the pressure
with which the face of the watching-target person 201 is held such that it is not
excessive.
[0102] In this state, it is possible to recognize which parts of both hands (including fingers)
of the robot 206 are in contact with the cartilage of both ears of the watching-target
person 201; thus, an advance is made to step S184, where the bone conduction microphones
244a and 244b and the cartilage conduction vibration sources 242a and 242b are turned
on, and then an advance is made to step S186. In this state, the air-conducted sound
speaker 223 and the bone conduction microphones 244a and 244b in an on state are used
together. Moreover, in step S186, in a similar manner as when speech is uttered from
the air-conducted sound speaker 223 alone, synchronization is continued so that the
mouth mechanism 209 moves in coordination with the voice by the vibration of the cartilage
conduction vibration sources 242a and 242b. The synchronization in step S186 is continued
even after, in step S144 in Fig. 12, the air-conducted sound speaker 223 is turned
off.
[0103] Next, in step S188, hand interval holding/joint slackening processing is started.
This is processing whereby the right and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b are controlled
so as to follow, so to speak, in a slackened state such that, as mentioned earlier,
both hand move translatorily while keeping the relative distance between them such
that they follow, with no resistance, free movement of the face of the watching-target
person 201. This processing is continued even after the flow exits step S188.
[0104] Furthermore, in step S190, processing is started whereby, while the curves of the
left and right middle fingers 213a and 231b are fine-tuned, the finger tips are brought
into contact with the tragi of the watching-target person 201 and, while the curves
of the left and right thumbs 221a and 221b are fine-tuned, they are brought into contact
with the cheek bones of the watching-target person 201. Next, in step S192, it is
checked whether or not, as a result of the just-mentioned processing, the left and
right middle fingers 213a and 231b are in contact with the tragi and the left and
right thumbs 221a and 221b are in contact with the cheek bones, and if contact is
not confirmed, an advance is made to step S194. In step S194, it is checked whether
or not a predetermined time has elapsed since step S190 was started, and if the predetermined
time has not elapsed, a return is made to step S190. Thereafter, steps S190 through
S194 are repeated. During this repetition, if, in step S192, contact with the tragi
and the cheek bones is confirmed, the flow ends, and a jump is made to step S142 in
Fig. 11. In this case, as mentioned earlier, an advance is made from step S142 to
step S144, and thus the stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the
air-conducted sound speaker 223 are turned off. On the other hand, also if, in step
S194, it is confirmed that the predetermined time has elapsed, the flow ends, and
a jump is made to step S142 in Fig. 11. In this case, step S144 in Fig. 11 is skipped,
and while the stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted
sound speaker 223 in an on state is kept being used together, a jump is made to step
S146.
[0105] On the other hand, if, in step S168, it is judged that there is even a slight indication
of intention to refuse contact, an advance is made to step S196, where the heating
of the hands to human body temperature by the heaters 225a and 225b is stopped, and
the flow ends. Likewise, also if, in step S174, safety is not confirmed, an advance
is made to step S196, where the heating of the hands to human body temperature by
the heaters 225a and 225b is stopped, and the flow ends. In either case, no cartilage
conduction by contact between the hands of the robot 206 and the watching-target person
201 is performed, and communication by air-conducted sound is continued.
[0106] The various features of the embodiments described above can be implemented not only
in those specific embodiments but also in any other embodiment so long as they provide
their advantages. Moreover, the various features of the embodiments can be implemented
with various modifications. Modified features can be implemented in appropriate combinations
with each other and with unmodified features.
[0107] For example, in the configuration of the robot of the third embodiment, bone conduction
microphones are provided in thumbs and cartilage conduction vibration sources are
provided in middle fingers. This, however, is not meant as any limitation; for example,
cartilage conduction vibration source may be provided in forefingers. For another
example, a plurality of cartilage conduction vibration sources may be provided respectively
in a plurality of fingers of one hand. In the third embodiment, when cartilage conduction
is started, the heating of the hands to human body temperature is started. Instead,
the heaters may be kept on all the time to keep the hands of the robot at human body
temperature so that, even when the robot touches the watching-target person for other
purposes, it does not feel cold.
[0108] In the flow in Fig. 11, only if, in step S136, a registered person for cartilage
conduction is confirmed or if, in step S138, the ambient sound level becomes high,
the both-hand contact processing in step S140 is started. In addition to those cases,
an interrupt may be issued based on a free indication of intention from the watching-target
person 201 (for example, when an utterance of the watching-target person 201 wishing
contact is confirmed by the stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246, or
when a movement of the watching-target person 201 wishing cartilage conduction is
confirmed by the 3D camera 238, or when the watching-target person 201 himself takes
a hand of the robot 206 and puts it to his ear) so that an advance is then made to
step S140 in Fig. 11.
[0109] In the third embodiment, the hands of the robot are provided with tactile sensors
for confirming contact of the finger tips with the tragi of the watching-target person.
These sensors may be replaced with optical proximity sensors, or tactile sensors and
optical proximity sensors may be used together.
Fourth Embodiment
[0110] Fig. 13 is a system configuration diagram of a fourth embodiment according to one
aspect of the present invention. Like the third embodiment shown in Figs. 9 to 12,
the fourth embodiment is configured as a robot that can communicate with a human by
cartilage conduction; as in the first embodiment, it constitutes a watching system
for watching inside a home and, like the robot 206 of the second embodiment, is capable
of humanly communication with a watching-target person 201. The fourth embodiment
in Fig. 13 has much in common with the third embodiment, and accordingly, similar
parts are identified by the same reference numerals, and no overlapping description
will be repeated unless necessary.
[0111] The fourth embodiment shown in Fig. 13 differs from the third embodiment shown in
Fig. 3 in the structure and control of the hands of the robot 306. As a result, as
shown in Fig. 13, the robot 306 of the fourth embodiment can hold and raise a watching-target
person 201 lying on a bed 350 and communicate with him by cartilage conduction. Like
the robot 206 of the third embodiment, the robot 306 of the fourth embodiment can
communicate also with a watching-target person 201 who can go about by himself.
[0112] Next, with reference to Fig. 13, the functions of the robot 306 related to communication
with a lying watching-target person 201 will be described in detail. In preparation
for communication, as shown in Fig. 13, the robot 306 holds and raises the watching-target
person 201 a little with both hands so that he will face the face of the robot 306.
This permits friendlier communication than if the robot 306 standing beside a bed
350 looks down at the watching-target person 201 with no physical contact.
[0113] The functions of different fingers in the state in Fig. 13 will be described. The
middle fingers 313, the ring fingers 351, and the little fingers 352 put behind the
back of the head and the neck of the watching-target person 201 chiefly support the
weight of the upper body of the watching-target person 201. The thumbs 321 provided
with cartilage conduction vibration sources make contact with the tragi 232 of the
watching-target person 201, and conduct voice from the robot 306 by cartilage conduction.
The forefingers 354 provided with bone conduction microphones make contact with the
mastoid bones of the watching-target person 201, and collect the voice of the watching-target
person 201 by bone conduction.
[0114] Fig. 14 is a block diagram of the robot 306 of the fourth embodiment of the present
invention shown in Fig. 13. Such parts as appear also in Fig. 13 are identified by
the same reference numerals, and no overlapping description will be repeated unless
necessary. As mentioned above, the fourth embodiment has much in common with the third
embodiment, and thus the configuration of the right hand 211, which differs from that
in the third embodiment, is illustrated in relation to a control unit 340. For the
other parts, Fig. 10, which is a block diagram of the third embodiment, and the corresponding
description are to be referred to, and their illustration is omitted or simplified
in Fig. 14. Even such parts as are illustrated in Fig. 14, if they appear also in
Fig. 10, are identified by the same reference numerals, and no overlapping description
will be repeated.
[0115] As will be clear from Fig. 14, the middle finger 313 of the right hand 211 of the
robot 306 is provided with a first cartilage conduction vibration source 242a and
a first tactile sensor 231a. On the other hand, the thumb 321 of the right hand 211
of the robot 306 is provided with a first bone conduction microphone 244a, and this
collects bone-conducted sound from the cheek bone or the like. The configuration thus
far is the same as that of the cartilage conduction vibration source 242a, the tactile
sensor 231a, and the bone conduction microphone 244a shown in Fig. 10, and these are
used, as in the third embodiment, to communicate with a watching-target person 201
who can go about by himself.
[0116] Next, the configuration that functions when communicating with a watching-target
person 201 lying as in Fig. 13 will be described. The thumb 321 is provided with a
second cartilage conduction vibration source 342a, and this makes contact with the
tragus 232 of the watching-target person 201 to conduct voice from the robot 306 by
cartilage conduction. The thumb 321 is also provided with a second tactile sensor
331a which monitors the state of contact with the tragus 232 of the watching-target
person 201 to achieve and maintain satisfactory cartilage conduction. On the other
hand, the forefinger 354 is provided with a second bone conduction microphone 344a,
and this makes contact with the mastoid bode of the watching-target person 201 to
collect the voice of the watching-target person 201 by bone conduction. The second
cartilage conduction vibration source 342a, the second tactile sensor 331a, and the
second bone conduction microphone 344a just mentioned are switched with the first
cartilage conduction vibration source 242a, the first tactile sensor 231a, and the
first bone conduction microphone 244a mentioned previously so that either set functions
at the time.
[0117] As shown in Fig. 14, between the middle, ring, and little fingers 313, 351, and 352
and the right hand 211, a hold-and-raise finger adjustment mechanism 355 is provided,
and this supports those fingers such that, put behind the back of the head and the
neck, they can support the weight of the upper body of the watching-target person
201. At this time, also the right joint mechanism 227a supports the right hand 211
and the right arm 215 so as to support the weight of the upper body of the watching-target
person 201. However, to avoid excessive restraint on the head of the watching-target
person 201, the right joint mechanism 227 controls such that, while the position in
the vertical direction is maintained, movement is possible in the horizontal direction
so as to follow, with no resistance, free movement of the head of the watching-target
person 201. Also in the up-down direction, if the head of the watching-target person
201 exhibits a larger than predetermined movement, it is followed, with no resistance,
to comfortably support the weight of the upper body of the watching-target person
201.
[0118] With the configuration described above, in the fourth embodiment, as shown in Fig.
13, a watching-target person 201 lying on a bed 350 can be held and raised naturally
and communication can be conducted by cartilage conduction in a friendlier, comfortable
state.
[0119] Fig. 15 is a flow chart showing part of the functions of the control unit 340 in
the robot 306 of the fourth embodiment shown in Fig. 14. As mentioned above, the fourth
embodiment has much in common with the third embodiment, and thus for a flow chart
showing the functions of the entire control unit 340, the one in Fig. 11 directed
to the third embodiment is to be referred to. In other words, the flow chart in Fig.
15 will be described as showing the details of the both-hand contact processing in
step S140 in the flow chart in Fig. 11. When the flow chart in Fig. 11 is referred
to as being directed to the fourth embodiment, in the both-hand retraction processing
in step S152, before the face of the watching-target person 201 is released, processing
is performed whereby the head of the watching-target person 201 is put back on the
bed 350 slowly. Also similar to the third embodiment is that, when the both-hand retraction
processing in step S152 ends, the heating of the hands by the heaters 225a is stopped.
[0120] The flow in Fig. 15 starts when the flow in Fig. 11 reaches step S140. In step S202,
it is checked whether or not step S140 has already been performed so that the hands
of the robot 306 are already in contact with the watching-target person 201. If it
is detected that contact has already been made, it is judged that cartilage conduction
has already been achieved, and the flow ends immediately. In this case nothing is
performed in step S140.
[0121] On the other hand, if, in step S202, contact by the hands of the robot 306 is not
confirmed, an advance is made to step S204, where rapid heating of the hands to human
body temperature by the heaters 225a and 225b is started, and an advance is made to
step S206. In step S206, consent-to-contact communication processing is performed
whereby, while the intention of the watching-target person 201 is respected, consent
to contact for head-raising is prompted. The communication here is similar to that
in the third embodiment. Then, with the 3D camera 238 and the stereo external air-conducted
sound microphones 246, while a response from the other side is waited, his behavior
is observed, and an advance is made to step S208.
[0122] In step S208, it is checked whether or not there is an indication of intention of
the watching-target person 201 with a refusing phrase or a refusing movement from
the watching-target person 201, and if it can be judged that there is no indication
of intention to refuse contact, an advance is made to step S210. In step S210, it
is checked whether or not the watching-target person 201 is a lying person. If, in
step S210, it is confirmed that the watching-target person 201 is a lying person,
the first cartilage conduction vibration source 242a, the first tactile sensor 231a,
and the first bone conduction microphone 244a are brought into a disabled state, and
the second cartilage conduction vibration source 342a, the second tactile sensor 331a,
and the second bone conduction microphone 344a are brought into an enabled state.
Thus, switching to a state where cartilage conduction is performed by the thumb 321
is complete, and an advance is made to step S214.
[0123] In step S214, line-of-sight alignment is performed whereby the direction in which
both hands are extended toward the face is aligned with the direction of the line
of sight, and an advance is made to step S216. In step S216, based on information
from the 3D camera 238, the right and left joint mechanisms 227a and 227b and the
hold-and-raise finger adjustment mechanism 355 are driven, then processing is performed
whereby the middle to little fingers 313 to 352 of the robot 306 are put behind the
back of the head and the neck of the watching-target person 201 to hold and raise
him, and an advance is made to step S218. In step S218, processing is performed whereby,
in a held and raised state, the curves of the thumb 321 and the forefinger 354 are
fine-tuned according to information from the second tactile sensor 331a (as necessary,
the first tactile sensor 231a is used together; the same applies in similar cases
below) and the 3D camera 238 so that those fingers are brought into contact with the
tragus and the mastoid bone respectively, and an advance is made to step S220. In
step S220, based on information from the second tactile sensor 331a and the 3D camera
238, it is checked whether or not the above-mentioned contact has been achieved. If
no contact is confirmed, a return is made to step S218, so that, until contact is
confirmed, steps S218 and S220 are repeated. When, in step S220, contact is confirmed,
an advance is made to step S222, where the applied pressure limiters are turned on
to start to limit the pressure with which the face of the watching-target person 201
is held on the thumbs 321 and the forefingers 354 of both hands such that it is not
excessive.
[0124] Subsequently, an advance is made to step S224, where the second bone conduction microphone
344a and the second cartilage conduction vibration source 342a are turned on, and
an advance is made to step S226. In step S226, synchronization is performed such that
the mouth mechanism 209 moves in coordination with the voice by the vibration of the
second cartilage conduction vibration source 342a, and an advance is made to step
S228.
[0125] In step S228, processing is performed whereby joints are slackened so that, while
the distance between the thumbs of both hands and the distance between the forefingers
of both hands are maintained, both hands can move translatorily in the horizontal
direction. As mentioned earlier, this is processing for performing control such that,
without the fingers of the robot 306 restraining the watching-target person 201, both
hands follow, in a slackened state, free movement of the head. This processing is
continued even after the flow exits the step S228.
[0126] When the processing in step S228 is started, an advance is made to step S230, where,
based on information from the second tactile sensor 331a and the 3D camera 238, it
is checked once again whether or not the thumb 321 and the forefinger 354 are in contact
with the tragus and the mastoid bone respectively. If, in step S230, contact is confirmed
once again, the flow ends. As a result, the flow jumps to step S142 in Fig. 11. On
the other hand, if, in step S230, no contact is confirmed any longer, an advance is
made to step S232. In step S232, it is checked whether or not a predetermined time
has elapsed since step S218 was started, and if the predetermined time has not elapsed,
a return is made to step S218. Thereafter, steps S218 through S232 are repeated. During
this repetition, if, in step S230, contact of the fingers with the tragus and the
mastoid bone is confirmed or if, in step S232, the lapse of the predetermined time
is confirmed, the flow ends, and a jump is made to step S142 in Fig. 11. In a case
where the target is a lying person, the processing in step S142 is to be read as "contact
with tragus/mastoid bone confirmed?".
[0127] On the other hand, if, in step S208, it is judged that the watching-target person
201 shows even a slight indication of intention to refuse contact, an advance is made
to step S234, where the heating of the hands to human body temperature by the heater
225a is stopped, and the flow ends. In this case, no cartilage conduction by contact
of the hands of the robot 306 with the watching-target person 201 is performed, and
communication by air-conducted sound is continued.
[0128] If, in step S210, it is not confirmed that the watching-target person 201 is a lying
person, an advance is made to step S236, where the second cartilage conduction vibration
source 342a, the second tactile sensor 331a, and the second bone conduction microphone
344a are brought into a disabled state, and the first cartilage conduction vibration
source 242a, the first tactile sensor 231a, and the first bone conduction microphone
244a are brought into an enabled state. Thus, switching to a state where cartilage
conduction is performed by the middle finger 313 is complete; thus, an advance is
made to self-sustained person processing in step S238, and when the processing is
complete, the flow ends. The self-sustained person processing in step S238 is the
same as steps S170 through S196 in Fig. 12.
Fifth Embodiment
[0129] Fig. 16 is a system configuration diagram of a fifth embodiment according to one
aspect of the present invention. Like the third embodiment shown in Figs. 9 to 12,
the fifth embodiment is configured as a robot 406 that can communicate with a human
by cartilage conduction. However, the robot 406 is configured as a customer handling
system in a bank. It makes smooth communication with particular customers possible
in a noisy environment in a bank visited by many customers, and provides a system
that is useful also from the perspective of privacy protection. The fifth embodiment
in Fig. 16 has much in common with the third embodiment; accordingly, similar parts
are identified by the same reference numerals, and no overlapping description will
be repeated unless necessary.
[0130] The fifth embodiment shown in Fig. 16 differs from the third embodiment shown in
Fig. 9 in that the robot 406 can maintain satisfactory cartilage conduction even when
it, by using one hand, makes contact with an ear of a customer, in that hygiene-related
problems that may result from serial contact with many customers are coped with, and
in that customers can be handled adroitly. As shown in Fig. 16, the robot 406, by
using only the right hand 211, makes contact with the left ear of a customer 401.
Specifically, as in the third embodiment in Fig. 9, the middle finger 413 makes contact
with the tragus 232, and the thumb 421 makes contact with the cheek bone. (Likewise,
it is also possible, by using only the left hand 229, to make contact with the right
ear of the customer 401.) When the customer 401 moves his head, to maintain contact
by following it, the finger is provided with an acceleration sensor. Moreover, for
adroit communication with the customer 401, an IC tag reader is provided in a finger.
These features will be described in detail later.
[0131] Fig. 17 is a block diagram of the robot 406 of the fifth embodiment of the present
invention shown in Fig. 16. Such parts as appear also in Fig. 16 are identified by
the same reference numerals, and no overlapping description will be repeated unless
necessary. As mentioned above, the fifth embodiment has much in common with the third
embodiment, and thus, as with the fourth embodiment, the configuration of the right
hand 211, 93in the third embodiment, is illustrated in relation to a control unit
440. For the other parts, Fig. 10, which is a block diagram of the third embodiment,
and the corresponding description are to be referred to, and their illustration is
omitted or simplified in Fig. 17. Even such parts as are illustrated in Fig. 17, if
common to Fig. 10, are identified by the same reference numerals, and no overlapping
description will be repeated.
[0132] As will be clear from Fig. 17, the middle finger 413 of the right hand 211 of the
robot 406 is provided with, in addition to a cartilage conduction vibration source
442a and a tactile sensor 431a, an acceleration sensor 456. The acceleration sensor
456 detects the acceleration of the middle finger 413 which is dragged by the movement
of the head due to contact friction. Based comprehensively on information on the acceleration
detected by the acceleration sensor 456, information on the change of the contact
pressure detected by the tactile sensor 431a, and information on the movement of the
head detected by the 3D camera 238, the control unit 440 determines the movement of
the head. Based on the determination, the right joint mechanism 227 is driven so that
the movement of the right hand 211 follows the movement of the head. In this way,
even when the head of the customer 401 moves, the contact of the middle finger 413
with the tragus and the contact of the thumb 421 with the cheek bone are maintained.
[0133] As shown in Fig. 17, the ring finger 451 is provided with an IC tag reader 457. This
serves, when the right hand 211 of the robot 406 makes contact with an accessory (described
later) distributed to the customer 401, to read the information of an IC tag provided
in the accessory. In a case where, as in Fig. 16, the robot 406 makes direct contact
with an ear of the customer 401, the IC tag reader 457 does not read customer information.
The just-mentioned accessory and its significance will be described later.
[0134] Fig. 18 is a flow chart showing the functions of the control unit 440 in the robot
406 of the fifth embodiment in Fig. 17. The flow starts when the supply of electric
power is started by a main power switch of the robot 406. When the flow starts, in
step S242, it is checked whether or not pairing for short-range communication with
a bank management section is set, and when no paring is set, paring is set automatically.
Next, in step S247, processing for starting an ordinary customer handling function
is performed. The ordinary customer handling function is a function whereby, in a
bank, the robot 406 handles a customer 401 by conducting conversation with the customer
401 by ordinary air-conducted sound.
[0135] Next, in step S248, it is judged whether or not the situation is one in which to
start conversation with the customer 401. If, in step S248, it is judged that conversation
should be started, an advance is made to step S250, where, first, the stereo external
air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted sound speaker 223 (see Fig.
10) are turned on in preparation for conversation by ordinary air-conducted sound.
Next, in step S252, it is checked whether or not the customer 401 is a registered
person (described later) with whom to conduct conversation by cartilage conduction.
If, in step S252, it cannot be confirmed that the customer 401 is a person registered
for cartilage conduction, an advance is made to step S254, where it is checked whether
or not the ambient air-conducted sound level is equal to or higher than a predetermined
level. The purpose of this step is to recognize a case where, as when the bank is
crowded with customers, the ambient air-conducted sound level is equal to or higher
than the predetermined level and personal conversation between the robot 406 and a
given customer 401 is difficult. If, in step S254, the ambient air-conducted sound
level is equal to or higher than the predetermined level, an advance is made to step
S256. In step S256, it is checked whether or not the customer 401 consents to the
robot 406 making contact with his ear for cartilage conduction. If consent is confirmed,
an advance is made to step S258. On the other hand, if, in step S252, the customer
401 is judged to be a registered person, an advance is made directly to step S258.
[0136] In step S258, processing for bringing one hand of the robot 406 into contact with
one ear of the customer 401 for cartilage conduction and then maintaining the contact
is started. The details will be given later. When the single-hand contact processing
in step S258 is started, an advance is made to step S260, where it is checked whether
or not the middle finger 413 of the robot 406 is in contact with the tragus of the
customer 401 and the thumb 421 is in contact with the cheek bone of the customer 401.
When that is confirmed, an advance is made to step S262, where the stereo external
air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted sound speaker 223 (see Fig.
10) are turned off, and the bone conduction microphone 244a and the cartilage conduction
vibration source 442a are turned on; then, an advance is made to step S264. In this
way, conversation by air-conducted sound is switched to conversation by cartilage
conduction and the bone conduction microphone 244a.
[0137] Next, in step S264, it is checked whether or not the customer 401 is a registered
person (described later) with whom to conduct conversation by cartilage conduction,
and if it is confirmed that he is a registered person, an advance is made to step
S266, where IC tag management processing is performed, and an advance is made to step
S268. What is performed in the IC tag management processing in step S266 will be described
later. On the other hand, if, in step S264, it cannot be confirmed that the customer
401 is a registered person, an advance is made to step S270, where regular menu processing
for a state (the state in Fig. 16) where a hand of the robot 406 makes direct contact
with the customer 401 is performed, and an advance is made to step S268.
[0138] If, in step S260, no contact with the tragus or the cheek bone as mentioned above
is confirmed, an advance is made directly to step S268. Also if, in step S254, it
is not judged that the ambient air-conducted sound level is equal to or higher than
the predetermined level or if, in step S256, no consent of the customer 401 to the
robot 406 making contact with his ear for cartilage conduction is confirmed, an advance
is made to step S268. In these cases, no processing for bringing one hand of the robot
406 to an ear of the customer 401 is performed, nor are the bone conduction microphone
244a and the cartilage conduction vibration source 442a turned on, but conversation
by the stereo external air-conducted sound microphones 246 and the air-conducted sound
speaker 223 is continued.
[0139] In step S268, it is checked whether or not conversation-based handling of the customer
401 by the robot 406 has ended. This check is done, as in the third embodiment, comprehensively
based on a check of whether or not both sides have remained silent for a predetermined
period or longer, an analysis of the contents of conversation, a check for presence
of key words suggesting the end of conversation, and the like. If, in step S268, it
is not judged that conversation has ended, a return is made to step S252, and thereafter,
until it is judged that conversation-based customer handling has ended, steps S252
through S268 are repeated. Owing to this repetition, even while no cartilage conduction
is being performed yet, when, for example, in step S254, the ambient sound level becomes
equal to or higher than the predetermined level, transition to cartilage conduction
is possible..
[0140] On the other hand, if, in step S268, it is judged that conversation-based customer
handling has ended, an advance is made to step S272, where it is checked whether or
not a cartilage conduction state is in effect. If a cartilage conduction state is
in effect, an advance is made to step S274, where the one hand of the robot 406 is
retracted, and an advance is made to step S276. At this time, as will be described
later, if the customer 401 is, by using his own hand, putting the hand of the robot
406 to the ear, so that the hand of the customer 401 will not be pushed aside, while
the load from the hand of the customer 401 is being monitored, until the customer
401 spontaneously removes his hand, a gentle retracting action is performed. On the
other hand, if, in step S272, it is confirmed that a cartilage conduction state is
not in effect, an advance is made directly to step S276.
[0141] In step S276, it is checked whether or not, as a result of the main power switch
of the robot 406 being turned off or as a result of the rechargeable battery in the
power supply unit 248 (see Fig. mobile phone 10) being depleted, the supply of electric
power to the robot 206 has stopped. If it is not confirmed that the supply of electric
power has stopped, a return is made to step S248. Thereafter, until, in step S276,
it is confirmed that the supply of electric power has stopped, steps S248 through
S276 are repeated to cope with various changes in the condition of the robot 406.
On the other hand, if, in step S276, it is confirmed that the supply of electric power
has stopped, the flow reaches step S278, where predetermined ending processing is
performed, and then the flow ends. The ending processing here includes, as a fail-safe
measure, a function whereby, in case one hand of the robot 406 remains extended toward
the face of the customer 401, it is retracted. When it is retracted, in a similar
manner as described in connection with step S274, safety measures are taken so that,
for example, the hand of the customer 401 will not be pushed aside.
[0142] Fig. 19 is a flow chart showing the detains of the single-hand contact/maintaining
processing in the step S258 in Fig. 18. When the flow starts, in step S282, it is
checked whether or not a hand of the robot 406 is already in contact with the customer
401. If it is not detected that contact has already been made, an advance is made
to step S284, where rapid heating of the hand to human body temperature by the heater
225a is started, and an advance is made to step S286. In step S286, contact guiding
communication processing is performed. Guidance is given chiefly by air-conducted
sound, but may be given visually by a display provided at the chest of the robot 406.
The guidance basically comprises an explanation of cartilage conduction-based commination
itself, but may include communication for introducing specific methods of contact
and prompting a choice from them, the methods including one in which the customer
401 takes in his own hand a hand of the robot 406 and puts it to his ear and one in
which the robot 406 extends a hand toward the face of the customer 401 and attempts
contact. By way of such communication, an advance is made to step S288.
[0143] In step S288, it is checked whether or not the customer 401 has chosen a method in
which the customer 401 takes in his own hand a hand of the robot 406 and puts it to
his ear. This check is done based on not only a choice response from the customer
401 but also detection of the customer 401 having abruptly started an action of taking
a hand of the robot 406 and putting it to his ear. If, in step S288, it is judged
that the customer 401 has not chosen contact started by hand-taking, an advance is
made to step S290, where line-of-sight alignment is started whereby the direction
in which the robot 406 extends one hand toward the face of the customer 401 is aligned
with the direction of the line of sight of the robot 406, and an advance is made to
step S292.
[0144] In step S292, single-hand adjustment processing is performed whereby the right joint
mechanism 227a (or the left joint mechanism 227b) is driven based on information from
the 3D camera 238 so that one hand is extended automatically to bring a finger into
contact with an ear of the customer 401, and an advance is made to step S294. In step
S294, it is checked whether or not a load resulting from one hand making contact with
the face is detected by the load detection sensor in the right joint mechanism 227a.
If no load is detected, a return is made to step S292, and then, until one hand makes
contact with the face, steps S292 and S294 are repeated. If, in step S294, a load
is detected, the applied pressure limiter is turned on to start to limit the pressure
with which the hand of the robot 406 pushes the face of the customer 401 from one
side such that it is not excessive, and an advance is made to step S296. The applied
pressure limiter prevents an accident such as one in which the robot 406 pushes down
the customer 401 sideways.
[0145] On the other hand, if, in step S288, it is judged that the customer 401 has chosen
a method in which the customer 401 takes in his own hand a hand of the robot 406 and
puts it to his ear, an advance is made to joint slackening processing in step S298,
where the hand of the robot 406 is left just to follow, without resistance, the movement
of the hand of the customer 401. In this slackening processing, to prevent the load
of the weight of the hand of the robot 406 from acting on the hand of the customer
401, the arm of the robot 406 is balanced in a gravity-free state the up-down direction
and is supported on the trunk 219 (see Fig. 10) of the robot 406 to permit movement
without resistance in the upward, downward, leftward, and rightward directions. If,
in step S298, it is confirmed that, by the hand of the customer 401 himself, one hand
of the robot 406 has been brought into contact with the face, an advance is made to
step S296.
[0146] In step S296, the bone conduction microphone 244a and the cartilage conduction vibration
source 442a are turned on, and an advance is made to step S300. In this state, the
air-conducted sound speaker 223 (see Fig. 10) and the bone conduction microphone 244a
in an on state are used together. In step S300, as in a case where speech is uttered
only from the air-conducted sound speaker 223, synchronization is continued so that
the mouth mechanism 209 (see Fig. 10) moves in coordination with the voice by the
vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source 442a. The synchronization in
step S300 is continued even after the air-conducted sound speaker 223 is turned off
in step S262 in Fig. 18.
[0147] Next, in step S302, finger adjustment processing is started. Started here is processing
whereby, while the curve of the middle finger 413 is fine-tuned, the fingertip is
brought into contact with the tragus of the customer 401 and, while the curve of the
thumb 421 is fine-tuned, it is brought into contact with the cheek bone of the customer
401. Next, in step S304, it is checked whether or not, as a result of the just-mentioned
processing, the middle finger 413 is in contact with the tragus and the thumb 421
is in contact with the cheek bone, and if contact is confirmed, an advance is made
to step S306, where the normal contact state is registered as a pressure of the tactile
sensor 431a and an image of the 3D camera 238 (Fig. 10). Then, an advance is made
to step S308, where monitoring of changes in the outputs of the acceleration sensor
456 and the tactile sensor 431a is started. In step S310, monitoring of a face recognition
position by the 3D camera 238 is started.
[0148] Then, in step S312, it is checked whether or not there is a change in the outputs
of the acceleration sensor 456 and the tactile sensor 431a or a change in the face
recognition position by the 3D camera 238. If there is any change, an advance is made
to step S314, where following processing is performed whereby the hand of the robot
406 is made to follow the detected movement of the head, and the flow ends. In the
processing here, as mentioned earlier, based on the acceleration, detected by the
acceleration sensor 456, of the middle finger 413 which is dragged by the movement
of the head due to contact friction and the change in contact pressure detected by
the tactile sensor 431a (the pressure decreasing as the head moves in the direction
away from the hand of the robot 406 and increasing as the head moves in the direction
in which it pushes the hand of the robot 406) as well as information on the movement
of the head detected by the 3D camera 238, the control unit 440 comprehensively determines
the movement of the head, and makes the hand of the robot 406 follow in such a direction
as to compensate for the movement, so that thereby, even when the head of the customer
401 moves, the contact of the middle finger 413 with the tragus and the contact of
the thumb 421 with the cheek bone are maintained. If, in step S312, none of a change
in the outputs of the acceleration sensor 456 and the tactile sensor 431a and a change
in the face recognition position by the 3D camera 238 is detected, the head is considered
to be at rest, and thus the flow ends immediately.
[0149] On the other hand, if, in step S304, no contact between the middle finger 413 and
the tragus or between the thumb 421 and the cheek bone is confirmed, an advance is
made to step S316, where it is checked whether or not a predetermined time has elapsed
since step S302 was started. If the predetermined time has not elapsed, a return is
made to step S302, and then, until, in step S304, contact is detected or, in step
S316, the lapse of the predetermined time is detected, the loop of steps S302, S304,
and S316 is repeated. If, in step S316, the lapse of the predetermined time is detected,
the flow ends immediately. When, via any of these steps, the flow in Fig. 19 ends,
a jump is made to step S260 in Fig. 18.
[0150] Figs. 20A to 20D comprise views showing how, in the fifth embodiment described with
reference to Figs. 16 to 19, the middle finger 413 of the robot 406 makes contact
with the tragus 232 of the customer 401 via an accessory. The overall system is the
same as in Fig. 16, and all parts except contact parts are omitted from illustration.
In Fig. 20A, as an example of an accessory, an ear warmer 461 is worn on both ears.
The tragus 232 hides beneath the ear warmer 461, and the middle finger 413 of the
robot 406 is in indirect contact with the tragus 232 of the customer 401 via the ear
warmer 461.
[0151] On the other hand, in Fig. 20B, as an example of an accessory, a headband 462 462
is worn around the head. The tragus 232 hides beneath the headband 462, and the middle
finger 413 of the robot 406 is in indirect contact with the tragus 232 of the customer
401 via the headband 462. In Fig. 20C, as an example of an accessory, an ear cuff
463 is worn on the tragus. The middle finger 413 of the robot 406 is in indirect contact
with the tragus of the customer 401 from over the ear cuff 463. In Fig. 20D, as an
example of an accessory, an article of character merchandise 464 for kids is worn
on the ear. The tragus hides beneath the article of character merchandise 464 for
kids, and the middle finger 413 of the robot 406 is in indirect contact with the tragus
of the customer 401 via the article of character merchandise 464 for kids. These accessories
are distributed to customers 401 visiting a bank as presents in exchange for registering
their individual information and consultation subjects. The accessories are provided
with an IC tag, to which a customer ID is written in by the bank management section.
The hand (for example, the ring finger 451) of the robot 406 is, as shown in Fig.
17, provided with an IC tag reader 457, so that, when the hand of the robot 406 comes
close to the accessory, the ID of the customer 401 is read out.
[0152] The accessories shown in Fig. 20 have a significance also as a measure for good hygiene.
A bank is visited by an unspecified number of customers, and the hand of the robot
406 touches the ears of a large number of customers. From the perspective of hygiene,
some customers may be unwilling to be touched by the hand of the robot 406 which has
touched no one knows whom. The accessories shown in Fig. 20, by covering the ear,
prevent the hand of the robot 406 from directly touching the skin of a customer, and
thereby meet the needs of such customers. Wearing an accessory has the advantage of
permitting a customer 401 to be identified by the IC tag, and it is possible to handle
different customers adroitly according to their consultation subjects registered beforehand.
Thus, customers can enjoy being presented with accessories as well as good hygiene
and appropriate customer handling, and this further heighten the incentive to visit
a bank for contact with the robot 406.
[0153] Fig. 21 is a system block diagram of the entire bank in the fifth embodiment, and
illustrates the parts related to the functions of the IC tag in an extracted fashion.
Such parts as appear also in Figs. 17 and 20 are identified by the same reference
numerals, and no overlapping description will be repeated unless necessary.
[0154] In Fig. 21, the bank management section 472 handles a customer before the customer
makes contact with the robot 406. By a reception data input unit 476 (a keyboard operated
by a receptionist, or a bank card reader), the customer is identified, and information
on his consultation subject is entered. A bank control unit 478 stores the thus entered
information in a customer database 480, then writes in, with an IC tag reader 482,
the customer ID to an accessory 461 (an ear warmer 461 is illustrated as a representative),
and distributes the accessory 461 as a present to the received customer.
[0155] Next, when the customer 401 wearing the distributed accessory 461 as shown in Fig.
20 makes contact with the robot 406, the IC tag reader 457 provided in the ring finger
451 reads out the customer ID written in to an IC tag 470 provided in the accessory
461, and transmits identification information of the customer 401 currently in contact
from a short-range communication unit 236 to a short-range communication unit 474
of the bank management section 472. In this way, the bank management section 472 reads
out information on the consultation subject of the corresponding customer 401 stored
in the customer database 480, and replies from the short-range communication unit
474 to the short-range communication unit 236 of the robot 406. Thus, the robot 406
can communicate with a particular customer 401 according to a consultation subject
registered beforehand. Communication is conducted by the vibration of the cartilage
conduction vibration source 442a provided in the middle finger 413 of the robot 406
being conducted to the tragus 232 indirectly via the accessory 461, and by the speech
of the customer 401 being picked up by the bone conduction microphone 244a.
[0156] Fig. 22 is a flow chart showing the functions of the bank control unit 478 in Fig.
21. The flow starts when the bank starts business on a given day, and in step S320,
it is checked whether or not customer handling related to customer registration is
requested. If there is a request, an advance is made to step S322, where it is checked
whether or not the request is for new registration of a customer. If the request is
for registration of a new customer, then, in step S324, mutual agreement processing
as to privacy protection is performed, and an advance is made to step S326. In step
S326, a customer ID is issued.
[0157] Next, in step S328, it is checked whether or not entry of customer information is
complete, and if it is complete, then, in step S330, it is checked whether or not
entry of the customer's subject information is complete. If this too is complete,
an advance is made to step S332, where, for each ID issued, the customer information
and the subject information are stored in the customer database 480, and an advance
is made to step S334. In step S334, it is checked whether or not writing-in of the
ID to an IC tag in the accessory to be distributed to the registered customer is complete,
and when it is confirmed to be complete, an advance is made to step S336. At this
time, the accessory is distributed to the customer. On the other hand, if, in step
S322, no new registration is being request, it is judged that registration is complete
and that an accessory has been distributed, and an advance is made directly to step
S336.
[0158] In step S336, it is checked whether or not the robot 406 has read out, with the IC
tag reader 457, the customer ID of the customer 401 currently in contact and has transmitted
it. If it has been transmitted, an advance is made to S338, where the customer information
corresponding to the received customer ID is read out from the customer database 480.
Then an advance is made to step S340, where the subject information corresponding
to the received customer ID is read out from the customer database 480. Then, in step
S342, the thus read-out data is transmitted to the robot 406.
[0159] Next, in step S344, it is checked whether or not a conversation record based on cartilage
conduction has been received from the robot 406. If there is a received conversation
record, an advance is made to S346, where, for each ID, it is analyzed and organized
as conversation information and is written in to the customer database 480; then an
advance is made to step S348. If, in step S344, no reception is conformed, an advance
is made directly to S348. In step S348, it is checked whether or not handling of the
customer 401 by the robot 406 has ended, and if it has not ended, a return is made
to S344, so that, until the end of customer handling, steps S344 through S348 are
repeated. When, in step S348, the end of customer handling is detected, the flow ends.
[0160] On the other hand, if, in step S336, it is not confirmed that the robot 406 has read
out a customer ID and has transmitted it, the flow ends immediately. If, in step S320,
no request for customer handling related to customer registration is confirmed, an
advance is made to step S350, where regular customer handling processing not involving
processing by an IC tag 470 is performed, and the flow ends.
Sixth Embodiment
[0161] Figs. 23A and 23B are perspective views related to a sixth embodiment according to
one aspect of the present invention, and it is configured, like the fifth embodiment,
as a customer handling system in a bank. However, whereas the fifth embodiment is
a system employing a humanoid robot, the sixth embodiment is configured as a system
including a display which a customer faces and a telescopic cartilage conduction talking
unit which is provided at a side of the display and which a customer can take in his
hand and put to his ear.
[0162] A detailed description follows with reference to Figs. 23A and 23B. Fig. 23A is a
front view of a stationary customer handling apparatus 701. The stationary customer
handling apparatus 701 is provided with a large-screen display unit 705 which doubles
as a touch panel. The stationary customer handling apparatus 701 is provided with,
at its right side, a telescopic cartilage conduction talking unit 781 which is coupled
to it via a free joint 703. The telescopic cartilage conduction talking unit 781 has,
at the top end, a cartilage conduction unit 724, and is provided with, in a middle
part, a microphone 723. As will be described later, the cartilage conduction unit
724 has a telescopic structure such that the cartilage conduction unit 724 can be
pulled out upward. Fig. 23A basically shows a state where the telescopic cartilage
conduction talking unit 781 is not in use and is stored at the right side of the stationary
customer handling apparatus 701.
[0163] On the other hand, Fig. 23B shows a state where the telescopic cartilage conduction
talking unit 781 of the stationary customer handling apparatus 701 is in use. As will
be clear from Fig. 23B, a customer can, with his hand, pull out the cartilage conduction
unit 724 upward by sliding a sliding part 781c in the direction of the arrow 781a,
and can incline the cartilage conduction unit 724 forward. Since, as mentioned above,
the telescopic cartilage conduction talking unit 781 is coupled to the stationary
customer handling apparatus 701 via the free joint 703, it can be inclined not only
forward but in any direction.
[0164] With the structure described above, a customer can, while keeping a posture in which
he views bank information displayed on the large-screen display unit 705, pull out
the cartilage conduction unit 724 and put it to his ear with his hand to hear bank
information conveyed by voice even in a noisy environment in a bank. On the other
hand, the customer's own voice can be collected by the microphone 723 which, in a
state as just mentioned, is located close to the mouth. The cartilage conduction unit
724 is so balanced that it does not fall under its own weight or put a load on the
customer, and is supported in a slack state so as not to resist the movement of the
customer's hand. These features are also seen also in the fifth embodiment.
[0165] As shown in Fig. 23B, how to pull out the cartilage conduction unit 724 is displayed
on the large-screen display unit 705 so that a first-time customer can communicate
with the bank properly by cartilage conduction.
[0166] The various features of the embodiments described above can be implemented not only
in those specific embodiments but also in any other embodiment according to the appended
claims. Moreover, the various features of the embodiments can be implemented with
various modifications. Modified features can be implemented in appropriate combinations
with each other and with unmodified features. For example, a configuration where an
accessory like any shown in Figs. 20 to 22 in connection with the fifth embodiment
is used can be applied also to the sixth embodiment shown in Figs. 23A and 23B.
[0167] In the fifth embodiment, as a means for holding a customer ID, an IC tag is taken.
However, what is usable as such a means for holding information is not limited to
an IC tag, but may instead be a bar code or a two-dimensional bar code. A configuration
where a customer ID is held directly in a means for holding information is not meant
as any limitation. Instead, an accessory ID by which an accessory can be identified
may be held there, in which case, by holding information associating each accessory
with the customer to which it was distributed in a database, it is possible, by reading
out the accessory ID, to identify the wearer indirectly.
[0168] Needless to say, the single-hand contact/maintaining processing described with reference
to Fig. 19 in connection with the fifth embodiment is effective also in a case where
vibration is conducted to the tragus or the like indirectly via an accessory as shown
in Fig. 20.
[0169] Conclusive Descriptions: The following is conclusive descriptions of the features of the embodiments disclosed
herein.
[0170] According to one embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a watching system
including a watching detection device and a watching notification device. The watching
detection device has a cartilage conduction vibration source and a watching detection
sensor, and is mountable to an ear with an entrance of an external auditory canal
open. The watching notification device receives watching information from the watching
detection sensor by performing short-range communication with the watching detection
device. This contributes to comfortable wear of the watching detection device.
[0171] According to a specific feature, the watching detection device has an air conduction
microphone, and functions as a hearing aid by vibrating the cartilage conduction vibration
source in accordance with a voice signal picked up by the air conduction microphone.
This makes it possible to perform watch by using a hearing aid which is used daily.
According to another specific feature, the watching detection device makes the cartilage
conduction vibration source vibrate in accordance with a voice signal received from
the watching notification device via short-range communication. This makes it possible
to perform watch by using a device, such as a mobile phone, through which it is possible
to hear a voice signal received from another device.
[0172] According to another specific feature, the watching detection sensor is a masticatory
movement sensor. According to another specific feature, the watching detection sensor
is a voice sensor. For example, the voice sensor is a bone conduction microphone or
an air-conducted sound microphone.
[0173] According to another specific feature, the watching notification device issues a
notification when it has been impossible to receive a detection signal for a predetermined
period of time.
[0174] According to another embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a watching system
including a watching detection device, and a plurality of watching notification devices
which each receive watching information from the watching detection device via short-range
communication with the watching detection device. The plurality of watching notification
devices exchange with each other the watching information received. This makes it
possible to deal with a missing part in the watching information received by one watching
notification device by sharing the watching information received by the other watching
notification devices, and thus to prevent confusion from occurring among the plurality
of watching notification devices.
[0175] According to another embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a watching system
including a watching detection device, and a plurality of watching notification devices
which each receive watching information from the watching detection device via short-range
communication with the watching detection device. The plurality of watching notification
devices issue different notifications based on the watching information. This makes
it possible to perform watch in a manner suitable to each of the plurality of watching
notification devices, which are different from each other in properties. According
to a specific feature, the plurality of watching notification devices include a mobile
phone and a notification device placed in a home.
[0176] According to another embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a watching system
including a watching detection device having a voice sensor, and a watching notification
device that receives watching information from the watching detection sensor via short-range
communication with the watching detection device. The watching notification device
issues a notification of whether a voice signal picked up by the voice sensor is present,
without issuing any notification of the contents of the voice signal. This helps protect
privacy of a watching-target person. According to a specific feature, the watching
notification device makes a judgment on urgency of the voice signal picked up by the
voice sensor, and when the urgency is high, the contents of the voice signal is exceptionally
notified. This makes it possible to obtain a specific notification in raw voice in
a case where a scream or a cry for help has been received.
[0177] According to another embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a watching detection
device including a cartilage conduction vibration source and a watching detection
sensor, and the watching detection device is mountable to an ear with an entrance
of an external auditory canal open. This contributes to comfortable wear of the watching
detection device.
[0178] According to a specific feature, the watching detection device has an air conduction
microphone, and functions as a hearing aid by vibrating the cartilage conduction vibration
source in accordance with a voice signal picked up by the air conduction microphone.
According to another specific feature, the watching detection device vibrates the
cartilage conduction vibration source in accordance with a voice signal received from
the watching notification device via short-range communication, to thereby function
as a device, such as a mobile phone, through which it is possible to hear a voice
signal received from another device.
[0179] According to another specific feature, the watching detection sensor is a masticatory
movement sensor. According to a more specific feature, the masticatory movement sensor
can serve also as the cartilage conduction vibration source. According to another
specific feature, the watching detection sensor is a voice sensor. More specifically,
the voice sensor is a bone conduction microphone. Still more specifically, the bone
conduction microphone can serve also as the cartilage conduction vibration source.
[0180] According to another specific feature, the watching detection sensor includes an
air-conducted sound microphone for a hearing aid, and the air-conducted sound microphone
is turned off when the bone conduction microphone is used. According to another specific
feature, the voice sensor is an air-conducted sound microphone.
[0181] According to another embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a watching notification
device having an acquisition unit that acquires watching information from a voice
sensor and a notification unit that issues a notification of whether a voice signal
acquired by the acquisition unit is present, without issuing any notification of contents
of the voice signal. This helps protect privacy of a watching-target person. According
to a specific feature, the notification unit makes a judgment on urgency of the voice
signal picked up by the voice sensor, and the contents of the voice signal is notified
exceptionally when the urgency is high.
[0182] According to one embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a robot including:
a hand; and a cartilage conduction vibration source which is provided in the hand.
Thus, communication is possible between the robot and the human by cartilage conduction
with a natural movement.
[0183] According to a specific feature, the robot includes two hands, and the cartilage
conduction vibration source is provided in each of the two hands. Thus, communication
is possible between the robot and the human by cartilage conduction with a comforting
staging in which, for example, the head of the person is held gently in both hands
of the robot. In addition, stereophonic hearing is possible.
[0184] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a finger in the hand, and
the cartilage conduction vibration source is provided in the finger. Thus, more efficient
cartilage conduction is possible.
[0185] According to a more specific feature, there is provided a joint mechanism which guides
the entire hand to achieve contact with the ear cartilage and which adjusts the finger
to guide it to the tragus. Thus, adjustment for appropriate cartilage conduction is
possible.
[0186] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a control unit which, when
the two hands make contact with the ear cartilages of two ears respectively for cartilage
conduction, controls the two hands so as not to restrain the movement of the face
while maintaining the positions of the two hands relative to each other. Thus, cartilage
conduction without a sense of restraint is possible.
[0187] According to another specific feature, the robot includes an eye which is movable
in exterior appearance, and the eye is moved in coordination such that the line of
sight of the eye points between the two hands. Thus, more intimate communication with
the robot by cartilage conduction is possible.
[0188] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a mouth mechanism which
is movable in exterior appearance, and the mouth mechanism moves in coordination with
the voice conducted by the vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source.
Thus, communication by natural cartilage conduction is possible.
[0189] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a limiter which, when the
hand makes contact with the ear cartilage to conduct the vibration of the cartilage
conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage, adjusts the pressure of the contact.
Thus, safe communication by cartilage conduction is possible.
[0190] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a communicating means for
asking for consent when the hand is brought into contact with the ear cartilage to
conduct the vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage.
Thus, communication by cartilage conduction without a sense of discomfort is possible.
[0191] According to another specific feature, the robot includes a control unit which, when
the hand is brought into contact with the ear cartilage to conduct the vibration of
the cartilage conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage, confirms safety beforehand.
Thus, highly safe communication by cartilage conduction is possible.
[0192] According to another specific feature, the robot includes an abnormality detecting
means, and, when the hand is brought into contact with the ear cartilage to conduct
the vibration of the cartilage conduction vibration source to the ear cartilage, if
the abnormality detecting means detects an abnormality, the hand is inhibited from
making contact with the ear cartilage. Thus, even in an unforeseen situation, trouble
can be avoided.
[0193] According to another feature of an embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided
a robot including: a hand; and a heater which heats the hand to human body temperature.
Thus, it is possible to achieve comfortable physical contact.
[0194] According to another embodiment disclosed herein, there is provided a cartilage conduction
hearing system including: a cartilage conduction unit which conducts vibration to
the ear cartilage of a human; and an accessory which is worn by the human and which
covers at least part of the ear cartilage. The vibration of the cartilage conduction
unit is conducted to the ear cartilage indirectly via the accessory. Thus, problems
that arise from the cartilage conduction unit being in direct contact with the ear
cartilage can be solved. According to a specific feature, the cartilage conduction
unit is shared among a large number of people, and different accessories are worn
by the large number of people respectively. Thus, despite the sharing of the cartilage
conduction unit touched by no one knows whom, it is possible to build a hearing system
that provides the benefits of cartilage conduction hygienically.
[0195] According to another specific feature, the accessory is configured as one of an ear
warmer, a headband, an ear cuff, and an ear-worn article of character merchandise.
Thus, it is possible to motivate the person to wear the accessory spontaneously.
[0196] According to another specific feature, the cartilage conduction hearing system of
this embodiment is configured as a customer handling system in a bank. Thus, despite
the sharing of the cartilage conduction unit used by no one knows whom, it is possible
to make suitable use of the benefits of the hearing system according to the present
invention which provides the benefits of cartilage conduction hygienically.
[0197] According to another specific feature, in the cartilage conduction hearing system
of this embodiment, the accessory includes an information holding unit that holds
information for identifying an wearer thereof, and there is provided a reading means
for reading the information in a state where the cartilage conduction unit can conduct
the vibration of the cartilage conduction unit to the ear cartilage via the accessory.
Thus, it is possible to build a hearing system that can meet the wearer's needs adroitly,
and thus to motivate the person to wear the accessory. According to a more specific
feature, the information is information on the wearer. According to another more specific
feature, the information is information for identifying the accessory, and there is
provided a related information holding means for holding information on the relationship
between the wearer and the accessory.
[0198] According to another specific feature of this embodiment, the cartilage conduction
unit is provided in a finger of the robot. Thus, the effect of contact with the ear
cartilage is enhanced, and cartilage conduction can be used effectively.
[0199] According to a more specific feature, the robot includes a joint mechanism which,
when the human guides the finger of the robot to the ear cartilage, holds an arm of
the robot so as not to resist it. Thus, the cartilage conduction unit can be guided
to the ear cartilage reliably, and smooth cooperation for cartilage conduction is
possible between the human and the robot.
[0200] According to another more specific feature, the cartilage conduction unit conducts
vibration to one ear of the human, and there is provided a following means for making
the finger of the robot follow the movement of the head of the human. Thus, despite
vibration being conducted to one ear, the conduction of the vibration can be prevented
from being broken by the movement of the head of the human.
[0201] According to another feature of this embodiment, there is provided a cartilage conduction
hearing system including: a cartilage conduction unit which conducts vibration to
the ear cartilage of a human; and a support unit which movably supports the cartilage
conduction unit. When the human guides to the ear cartilage, the support unit supports
the cartilage conduction unit so as not to resist it. Thus, the cartilage conduction
unit can be guided to the ear cartilage reliably without giving a sense of discomfort
to the user. According to a specific feature, the cartilage conduction unit is provided
in a finger of the robot. According to another specific feature, the cartilage conduction
hearing system of this embodiment includes a display screen, and the cartilage conduction
unit is supported on the display screen by the support unit.
[0202] According to another feature of this embodiment, there is provided a cartilage conduction
hearing system including: a cartilage conduction unit which is provided in a finger
of a robot to conduct vibration to the ear cartilage of a human; and a following means
which is provided in the robot to make the finger of the robot follow the movement
of the head of the human when the cartilage conduction unit conducts vibration to
one ear of the human. Thus, despite vibration being conducted to one ear, the conduction
of the vibration can be prevented from being broken by the movement of the head of
the human.
[0203] According to another feature of this embodiment, there is provided a cartilage conduction
hearing system including: a cartilage conduction unit provided in a first finger of
a robot to conduct vibration to the ear cartilage of a human. The head of the human
is supported by a second finger of the robot. Thus, for example, a lying person can
be raised naturally to conduct communication.
[0204] According to a specific feature, it is provided in the first finger of each of a
left and a right hand of the robot to conduct vibration to the ear cartilages of the
left and right ears, respectively, of the human, and the head of the human is supported
by the second fingers of the left and right hands of the robot. According to another
specific feature, the first finger is a thumb, and the second finger is a middle finger.
[0205] According to another feature of this embodiment, there is provided a robot suitable
for use in various cartilage conduction hearing systems as described above.
Industrial Applicability
[0206] The present invention is applicable to a robot that can communicate with a human,
and to a customer handling system in a bank or the like.
List of Reference Signs
[0207]
- 211,229
- hand
- 242a, 242b
- cartilage conduction vibration source
- 206
- robot
- 213
- finger
- 227a, 227b
- joint mechanism
- 227a, 227b, 240
- control unit
- 207
- eye
- 209
- mouth mechanism
- 225a, 225b
- heater
- 240
- limiter
- 223, 215, 217, 240
- communicating means
- 240
- control unit
- 246, 238, 227a, 227b
- abnormality detection unit
- 321, 313, 413, 724
- cartilage conduction unit
- 461, 462, 463, 464
- accessory
- 470
- information holding unit
- 457
- information reading means
- 480
- related information holding unit
- 227a
- joint mechanism
- 431a, 456, 238, 440
- following means
- 227a
- support unit
- 705
- display unit
- 321
- first finger
- 313
- second finger